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Vision et langage: quelle importance du traitement en parallèle?
Auteur(s)
Clarke, Stephanie
Date de parution
2000
In
Revue Tranel (Travaux neuchâtelois de linguistique), Institut des Sciences du langage et de la communication, Université de Neuchâtel, 2000/33//67-81
Résumé
The visual system of man and of non-human primates is organised in a way which favours parallel processing. Different aspects of visual information, such as colour, shape or motion are processed independantly. Focal hemispheric lesions can thus cause very selective deficits. The parvo- and magnocellular pathways, specialised in the processing of psychophysically different visual stimuli, have separate representations at the cortical level. Two main pathways are involved in visual recognition and in visuo-spatial functions respectively. Lesions that occur in the adult and remain restricted to one or the other pathway are accompanied with distinct types of visual agnosia. Early occurring deficit in magnocellular processing was proposed to play a role in developmental dyslexia. Models of reading based on observations in normal subjects and the occurrence of different types of alexia following brain damage suggest that several neural pathways are involved in reading. Although these pathways have not been yet identified anatomically, recent experimental work demonstrated the largely parallel connections between structures known to be involved in reading.
Identifiants
Type de publication
journal article
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