Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production

For decades, human cognition involved in reading aloud and speech production has been investigated extensively (a quote search of the two in google scholar produces about 83,000 and 255,000 results, respectively). This large amount of research has produced quite detailed descriptions of the cognitiv...

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Superior document:Frontiers Research Topics
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Year of Publication:2016
Language:English
Series:Frontiers Research Topics
Physical Description:1 electronic resource (134 p.)
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spelling Simone Sulpizio auth
Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
Frontiers Media SA 2016
1 electronic resource (134 p.)
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Frontiers Research Topics
For decades, human cognition involved in reading aloud and speech production has been investigated extensively (a quote search of the two in google scholar produces about 83,000 and 255,000 results, respectively). This large amount of research has produced quite detailed descriptions of the cognitive mechanisms that allow people to speak or to read aloud a word. However, despite the fact that reading aloud and speech production share some processes – generation of phonology and preparation of a motor speech response – the research in this two areas seems to have taken parallel and independent tracks, with almost no contact between the two. The present Research Topic takes an initial step towards building a bridge that will link the two research areas, as we believe that such an endeavour is essential for moving forward in our understanding of how the mind/brain processes words. To this aim, we encourage contributions exploring the relation between speech production and reading aloud. The questions the Research Topic should address include, but are not limited to, the following: To what extent are speech production and word reading/reading aloud similar? Are there some shared components and/or mechanisms between the two process? Is the time course of the (supposed) shared mechanisms activation similar in the two processes? How does the different input (conceptual vs. orthographic) interact with the types of information that reading and speaking share (semantic and phonological knowledge, articulatory codes)? How does a difference in the input affect the (supposed) common stages of processing (i.e., phonological encoding, and articulatory planning and execution)? We welcome any kind of contribution (e.g., original research article, review, opinion) that answers the above or other questions related to the Topic.
English
ERPs
planning
Eye-tracking
lexical access
phonological encoding
speech production
reading aloud
bilingualism
2-88919-895-2
Sachiko Kinoshita auth
language English
format eBook
author Simone Sulpizio
spellingShingle Simone Sulpizio
Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
Frontiers Research Topics
author_facet Simone Sulpizio
Sachiko Kinoshita
author_variant s s ss
author2 Sachiko Kinoshita
author2_variant s k sk
author_sort Simone Sulpizio
title Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_full Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_fullStr Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_full_unstemmed Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_auth Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_new Bridging Reading Aloud and Speech Production
title_sort bridging reading aloud and speech production
series Frontiers Research Topics
series2 Frontiers Research Topics
publisher Frontiers Media SA
publishDate 2016
physical 1 electronic resource (134 p.)
isbn 2-88919-895-2
illustrated Not Illustrated
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Are there some shared components and/or mechanisms between the two process? Is the time course of the (supposed) shared mechanisms activation similar in the two processes? How does the different input (conceptual vs. orthographic) interact with the types of information that reading and speaking share (semantic and phonological knowledge, articulatory codes)? How does a difference in the input affect the (supposed) common stages of processing (i.e., phonological encoding, and articulatory planning and execution)? 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