1st Edition

The Cognitive Neuroscience of Reading A Special Issue of scientific Studies of Reading

Edited By Rebecca Sandak, Russell A. Poldrack Copyright 2004

    This special issue of Scientific Studies of Reading highlights the great deal of progress that has been made recently in understanding the neurobiological foundations of basic processes in reading. The papers demonstrate how functional neuroimaging techniques have provided novel insights into how reading works in the brain, and how these processes may be disorganized in reading disorders. Importantly, they illustrate that understanding how reading works in the brain is not a simple end-goal, but rather reveals new phenomena that will serve to constrain theories of reading. Although these articles make clear that full understanding of these processes is well off in the distance, the editors hope that they will inspire further collaboration between reading researchers and neuroscientists.

    Volume 8, Number 3, 2004.
    Contents: R.A. Poldrack, R. Sandack, Introduction to This Special Issue: The Cognitive Neuroscience of Reading. E.D. Palmer, T.T. Brown, S.E. Petersen, B.L. Schlaggar, Investigation of the Functional Neuroanatomy of Single Word Reading and Its Development. D. Caplan, Functional Neuroimaging Studies of Written Sentence Comprehension. M. Misra, T. Katzir, M. Wolf, R.A. Poldrack, Neural Systems for Rapid Automatized Naming in Skilled Readers: Unraveling the RAN-Reading Relationship. R. Salmelin, P. Helenius, Functional Neuroanatomy of Impaired Reading in Dyslexia. R. Sandack, W.E. Mencl, S.J. Frost, K.R. Pugh, The Neurobiological Basis of Skilled and Impaired Reading: Recent Findings and New Directions. C.A. Perfetti, D.J. Bolger, The Brain Might Read That Way.

    Biography

    Rebecca Sandak, Russell A. Poldrack