Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study

Reading aloud involves the conversion of visual input of words to pronunciations. Previous research has long established a model for reading aloud with two processing routes: (a) the sub-lexical route for graphophonological processing, which accounts for pseudoword reading; and (b) the lexical route...

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Main Author: Cheng Wenxuan
Other Authors: Annabel Chen Shen-Hsing
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148392
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1483922023-03-05T15:46:26Z Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study Cheng Wenxuan Annabel Chen Shen-Hsing School of Social Sciences Bhattacharjee Sagarika AnnabelChen@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Reading aloud involves the conversion of visual input of words to pronunciations. Previous research has long established a model for reading aloud with two processing routes: (a) the sub-lexical route for graphophonological processing, which accounts for pseudoword reading; and (b) the lexical route for semantic processing, which accounts for irregular word reading. Neuroimaging evidence supported a dorsal pathway for sub-lexical processing and a ventral pathway for lexical processing in the reading network, but few tested the relationship using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). Here, we examined how dorsal stimulation (anode at CP5 and cathode at Cz) and ventral stimulation (anode at TP7 and cathode at the nape of the neck) modulate word reading proficiency of regular words, irregular words and pseudowords. 15 participants with high English proficiency participated in three 20min sessions of sham, dorsal, and ventral stimulation respectively, each followed by a word reading task consisting of the three word types. While regular word reading efficiency was improved by ventral stimulation, it was worsened by dorsal stimulation. Both stimulations failed to modulate irregular word and pseudoword reading. In addition, a gender difference was found in tDCS modulation such that males experienced greater effects and females drove the negative effects. This study adds evidence to the research on tDCS modulation of reading in the healthy population, where results are often mixed and insignificant. The need to examine lexical/sub-lexical processing proficiency and gender difference in future tDCS studies on reading is highlighted. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2021-04-26T02:11:14Z 2021-04-26T02:11:14Z 2021 Final Year Project (FYP) Cheng Wenxuan (2021). Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study. Final Year Project (FYP), Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148392 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148392 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Cheng Wenxuan
Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
description Reading aloud involves the conversion of visual input of words to pronunciations. Previous research has long established a model for reading aloud with two processing routes: (a) the sub-lexical route for graphophonological processing, which accounts for pseudoword reading; and (b) the lexical route for semantic processing, which accounts for irregular word reading. Neuroimaging evidence supported a dorsal pathway for sub-lexical processing and a ventral pathway for lexical processing in the reading network, but few tested the relationship using transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS). Here, we examined how dorsal stimulation (anode at CP5 and cathode at Cz) and ventral stimulation (anode at TP7 and cathode at the nape of the neck) modulate word reading proficiency of regular words, irregular words and pseudowords. 15 participants with high English proficiency participated in three 20min sessions of sham, dorsal, and ventral stimulation respectively, each followed by a word reading task consisting of the three word types. While regular word reading efficiency was improved by ventral stimulation, it was worsened by dorsal stimulation. Both stimulations failed to modulate irregular word and pseudoword reading. In addition, a gender difference was found in tDCS modulation such that males experienced greater effects and females drove the negative effects. This study adds evidence to the research on tDCS modulation of reading in the healthy population, where results are often mixed and insignificant. The need to examine lexical/sub-lexical processing proficiency and gender difference in future tDCS studies on reading is highlighted.
author2 Annabel Chen Shen-Hsing
author_facet Annabel Chen Shen-Hsing
Cheng Wenxuan
format Final Year Project
author Cheng Wenxuan
author_sort Cheng Wenxuan
title Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
title_short Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
title_full Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
title_fullStr Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
title_full_unstemmed Testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tDCS study
title_sort testing the dorsal and ventral pathways in reading : a tdcs study
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/148392
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