VARIETIES OF PURE ALEXIA: THE CASE OF FAILURE TO ACCESS GRAPHEMIC REPRESENTATIONS.

We document the case of a patient (GV) w ho, following a left posterior brain lesion, showed a selective and severe deficit in naming visual objects and in reading letters, words, and numerals. Three sets of findings are critical for the interpretation of the patient's alexia. First, despite intact visual processing abilities and preserved ability to recognise the shape and orientation of letters, GV could not determ ine whether a pair of letters had the same name. Second, she should not access the orthographic structure and meaning of visually presented words, although she could access meaning from orally spelled words and she could access orthographic structure from m eaning in w ritten words. Third, GV could access partial semantic information from pictures and Arabic num erals. Based on this pattern of results, we conclude that the form of alexia manifested by our patient results from failure to access the graphemic representations of letters and w ords from normally processed visual input. The findings further suggest that access to letter forms and grapheme representations are sequentially ordered stages of processing in word recognition. The results also suggest that graphemic processing may be a distinct property of the left hemisphere.

[1]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  A framework for interpreting distinct patterns of hemispatial neglect , 1995 .

[2]  Paul B. Buckley,et al.  Comparisons of digits and dot patterns. , 1974, Journal of experimental psychology.

[3]  G. Humphreys,et al.  Disruption to word or letter processing? The origins of case-mixing effects. , 1997, Journal of experimental psychology. Learning, memory, and cognition.

[4]  Jeffrey S. Bowers,et al.  A Characterisation of the Word Superiority Effect in a Case of Letter-by-letter Surface Alexia , 1996 .

[5]  J. G. Snodgrass,et al.  A standardized set of 260 pictures: norms for name agreement, image agreement, familiarity, and visual complexity. , 1980, Journal of experimental psychology. Human learning and memory.

[6]  E. Zaidel,et al.  Letter Matching within and between the Disconnected Hemispheres , 1994, Brain and Cognition.

[7]  M. Coltheart,et al.  Case alternation impairs word identification , 1974 .

[8]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Cognitive and Neural Mechanisms Underlying Visual and Semantic Processing: Implications from Optic Aphasia , 1995, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[9]  Bernard Giusiano,et al.  Optic Aphasia: Evidence of the Contribution of Different Neural Systems to Object and Action Naming * * A subset of these data was presented at the Congress of the European Federation of Neurological Societies, Marseille, September 1995. , 1997, Cortex.

[10]  Ann M. Peters,et al.  Phonological encoding and ideographic reading by the disconnected right hemisphere: Two case studies , 1981, Brain and Language.

[11]  J L Bradshaw,et al.  Hemispheric asymmetry: verbal and spatial encoding of visual stimuli. , 1972, Journal of experimental psychology.

[12]  M S Gazzaniga,et al.  Organization of the human brain. , 1989, Science.

[13]  M. Behrmann,et al.  Perceptual Cues in Pure Alexia , 1996 .

[14]  L. Henderson Orthography and Word Recognition in Reading , 1982 .

[15]  Derek Besner,et al.  Is the right hemisphere literate , 1984 .

[16]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Levels of representation, co-ordinate frames, and unilateral neglect , 1990 .

[17]  W. Banks,et al.  Semantic congruity effects in comparative judgments of magnitudes of digits. , 1976 .

[18]  David Howard,et al.  Letter-by-letter readers: evidence for parallel processing , 1991 .

[19]  M I Posner,et al.  Chronometric analysis of classification. , 1967, Psychological review.

[20]  H. Coslett,et al.  Evidence for preserved reading in 'pure alexia'. , 1989, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[21]  Kathleen Baynes,et al.  Language and Reading in the Right Hemisphere: Highways or Byways of the Brain? , 1990, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[22]  D N Levine,et al.  A study of the visual defect in verbal alexia-simultanagnosia. , 1978, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[23]  J. Kay,et al.  Simultaneous Form Perception and Serial Letter Recognition in a Case of Letter-by-letter Reading , 1991 .

[24]  Derek Besner,et al.  On the Role of Outline Shape and Word-Specific Visual Pattern in the Identification of Function Words: None , 1989 .

[25]  Karalyn Patterson,et al.  Letter-by-letter Reading: Psychological Descriptions of a Neurologial Syndrome , 1982 .

[26]  L. Henderson,et al.  On the nature of the facilitation of visual comparisons by lexical membership , 1976 .

[27]  L. Cohen Number processing in pure alexia: The effect of hemispheric asymmetries and task demands , 1995 .

[28]  Stanislas Dehaene,et al.  The Organization of Brain Activations in Number Comparison: Event-Related Potentials and the Additive-Factors Method , 1996, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[29]  A. Damasio,et al.  The anatomic basis of pure alexia , 1983, Neurology.

[30]  D B Boles,et al.  Variability in letter-matching asymmetry , 1981, Perception & psychophysics.

[31]  Dario Grossi,et al.  Visual Associative Agnosia and Optic Aphasia. A Single Case Study and a Review of the Syndromes , 1992, Cortex.

[32]  A F Monk,et al.  Errors in proofreading: Evidence for the use of word shape in word recognition , 1983, Memory & cognition.

[33]  Marilyn Jager Adams,et al.  Models of word recognition , 1979, Cognitive Psychology.

[34]  Stanislas Dehaene,et al.  Two mental calculation systems: A case study of severe acalculia with preserved approximation , 1991, Neuropsychologia.

[35]  Alfonso Caramazza,et al.  Spatially Determined Deficits in Letter and Word Processing , 1991 .

[36]  F. Allard,et al.  Visual hemifield differences depend on typeface , 1976, Brain and Language.

[37]  Ruth Campbell,et al.  Optic aphasia with spared action naming: A description and possible loci of impairment , 1992, Neuropsychologia.

[38]  Stephen M. Kosslyn,et al.  Form-Specific Explicit and Implicit Memory in the Right Cerebral Hemisphere , 1994 .

[39]  Patricia A. Reuter-Lorenz,et al.  Modes of Lexical Access in the Callosotomized Brain , 1992, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience.

[40]  N. Geschwind,et al.  Color-naming defects in association with alexia. , 1966, Transactions of the American Neurological Association.

[41]  Patricia A. Reuter-Lorenz,et al.  A prelexical basis for letter-by-letter reading: A case study , 1990 .

[42]  D. Bub,et al.  Single-character processing in a case of pure alexia , 1993, Neuropsychologia.

[43]  H. Coslett,et al.  Preserved object recognition and reading comprehension in optic aphasia. , 1989, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[44]  David B. Boles,et al.  An upper- and lowercase alphabetic similarity matrix, with derived generation similarity values , 1989 .

[45]  Martha J. Farah,et al.  The Neuropsychology of High-Level Vision , 1994 .

[46]  D. Bub,et al.  Visual Word Activation in Pure Alexia , 1995, Brain and Language.

[47]  J. L. Mcclelland Preliminary letter identification in the perception of words and nonwords. , 1976, Journal of experimental psychology. Human perception and performance.

[48]  J. Marshall Two different readers in the same brain after a posterior callosal lesion , 1996 .

[49]  Stanislas Dehaene,et al.  Cerebral networks for number processing: Evidence from a case of posterior callosal lesion , 1996 .

[50]  H. Branch Coslett,et al.  Optic aphasia and the right hemisphere: A replication and extension , 1992, Brain and Language.

[51]  Robert Sekuler,et al.  Processing numerical information: A choice time analysis , 1971 .

[52]  J. Kay Simultaneous form perception and serial letter recognition in a case of letter-by letter reading , 2000 .

[53]  Geoffrey Underwood,et al.  Word shape, orthographic regularity, and contextual interactions in a reading task , 1982, Cognition.

[54]  E. Renzi,et al.  Associative Agnosia and Optic Aphasia: Qualitative or Quantitative Difference? , 1997, Cortex.

[55]  R. Shepard,et al.  CHRONOMETRIC STUDIES OF THE ROTATION OF MENTAL IMAGES , 1973 .

[56]  G. McConkie,et al.  Integrating information across eye movements , 1980, Cognitive Psychology.

[57]  Elizabeth K. Warrington,et al.  A dissociation between addition and subtraction with written calculation , 1994, Neuropsychologia.

[58]  T Shallice,et al.  Word-form dyslexia. , 1980, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[59]  C. Umilta,et al.  Hemispheric asymmetries in a letter classification task with different typefaces , 1980, Brain and Language.

[60]  M. Coltheart,et al.  The cognitive neuropsychology of language , 1987 .

[61]  James V. Hinrichs,et al.  Two-digit number comparison: Use of place information. , 1981 .

[62]  Marlene Behrmann,et al.  Localization in alexia. , 1994 .

[63]  ROBERT S. MOYER,et al.  Time required for Judgements of Numerical Inequality , 1967, Nature.

[64]  J. Dejerine,et al.  Contribution a l'etude anatomo-pathologique et clinique des differentes varietes de cecite verbale , 2000 .

[65]  M. Coltheart Disorders of reading and their implications for models of normal reading. , 1981 .

[66]  Gillian Cohen,et al.  Hemispheric differences in a letter classification task , 1972 .

[67]  H. Coslett,et al.  Reading with the Right-Hemisphere: Evidence from Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation , 1994, Brain and Language.

[68]  E. Warrington,et al.  A disorder of simultaneous form perception. , 1962, Brain : a journal of neurology.

[69]  Tim Shallice,et al.  Lexical processing in the absence of explicit word identification: Evidence from a letter-by-letter reader , 1986 .

[70]  Brian Butterworth,et al.  Selective Impairment in Manipulating Arabic Numerals , 1995, Cortex.

[71]  Tatjana A. Nazir,et al.  PURE ALEXIA AND THE VIEWING POSITION EFFECT IN PRINTED WORDS. , 1998, Cognitive neuropsychology.

[72]  Paolo Bartolomeo,et al.  Letter Dyslexia in a Letter-by-Letter Reader , 1996, Brain and Language.

[73]  B. Butterworth,et al.  Toward a multiroute model of number processing: Impaired number transcoding with preserved calculation skills. , 1995 .

[74]  Avraham Schweiger,et al.  On wrong hypotheses about the right hemisphere: Commentary on K. Patterson and D. Besner, “Is the right hemisphere literate?” , 1984 .