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Brain mechanisms of recovery from pure alexia: A single case study with multiple longitudinal scans

Pure alexia is an acquired reading disorder, typically due to a left occipito-temporal lesion affecting the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA). It is unclear whether the VWFA acts as a unique bottleneck for reading, or whether alternative routes are available for recovery. Here, we address this issue thro...

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Published in:Neuropsychologia 2016-10, Vol.91, p.36-49
Main Authors: Cohen, Laurent, Dehaene, Stanislas, McCormick, Samantha, Durant, Szonya, Zanker, Johannes M.
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description Pure alexia is an acquired reading disorder, typically due to a left occipito-temporal lesion affecting the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA). It is unclear whether the VWFA acts as a unique bottleneck for reading, or whether alternative routes are available for recovery. Here, we address this issue through the single-case longitudinal study of a neuroscientist who experienced pure alexia and participated in 17 behavioral, 9 anatomical, and 9 fMRI assessment sessions over a period of two years. The origin of the impairment was assigned to a small left fusiform lesion, accompanied by a loss of VWFA responsivity and by the degeneracy of the associated white matter pathways. fMRI experiments allowed us to image longitudinally the visual perception of words, as compared to other classes of stimuli, as well as the mechanisms of letter-by-letter reading. The progressive improvement of reading was not associated with the re-emergence of a new area selective to words, but with increasing responses in spared occipital cortex posterior to the lesion and in contralateral right occipital cortex. Those regions showed a non-specific increase of activations over time and an increase in functional correlation with distant language areas. Those results confirm the existence of an alternative occipital route for reading, bypassing the VWFA, but they also point to its key limitation: the patient remained a slow letter-by-letter reader, thus supporting the critical importance of the VWFA for the efficient parallel recognition of written words. •Pure alexia is a selective acquired impairment of visual word recognition.•It stems from left temporal lesions affecting the Visual Word Form Area (VWFA).•An alexic patient was scanned 9 times over a period of two years.•We study the mechanisms of reading improvement through letter-by-letter reading.•We demonstrate the role of an alternative occipital route bypassing the VWFA.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2016.07.009
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subjects Alexia
Alexia, Pure - diagnostic imaging
Alexia, Pure - etiology
Alexia, Pure - physiopathology
Alexia, Pure - rehabilitation
Brain - diagnostic imaging
Brain - physiopathology
fMRI
Humans
Language
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Pattern Recognition, Visual - physiology
Reading
Recovery of Function - physiology
Stroke - complications
Stroke - diagnostic imaging
Stroke - physiopathology
Stroke Rehabilitation
Vision
title Brain mechanisms of recovery from pure alexia: A single case study with multiple longitudinal scans
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