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Modulation of cortical activity during comprehension of familiar and unfamiliar text topics in speed reading and speed listening.


ABSTRACT: Brain activation associated with normal and speeded comprehension of expository texts on familiar and unfamiliar topics was investigated in reading and listening. The goal was to determine how brain activation and the comprehension processes it reflects are modulated by comprehension speed and topic familiarity. Passages on more familiar topics differentially activated a set of areas in the anterior temporal lobe and medial frontal gyrus, areas often associated with text-level integration processes, which we interpret to reflect integration of previous knowledge with the passage content. Passages presented at the faster presentation resulted in more activation of a network of frontal areas associated with strategic and working-memory processes (as well as visual or auditory sensory-related regions), which we interpret to reflect maintenance of local coherence among briefly available passage segments. The implications of this research is that the brain system for text comprehension adapts to varying perceptual and knowledge conditions.

SUBMITTER: Buchweitz A 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4363175 | biostudies-literature | 2014 Dec

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Modulation of cortical activity during comprehension of familiar and unfamiliar text topics in speed reading and speed listening.

Buchweitz Augusto A   Mason Robert A RA   Meschyan Gayane G   Keller Timothy A TA   Just Marcel Adam MA  

Brain and language 20141028


Brain activation associated with normal and speeded comprehension of expository texts on familiar and unfamiliar topics was investigated in reading and listening. The goal was to determine how brain activation and the comprehension processes it reflects are modulated by comprehension speed and topic familiarity. Passages on more familiar topics differentially activated a set of areas in the anterior temporal lobe and medial frontal gyrus, areas often associated with text-level integration proces  ...[more]

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