A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects

Based on the neuronal recycling hypothesis (Dehaene & Cohen, 2007), we examined whether reading acquisition has a cost for the recognition of nonlinguistic visual materials. More specifically, we checked whether the ability to discriminate between mirror images, which develops through literacy a...

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Main Authors: Regine eKolinsky, Tânia eFernandes
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2014-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01224/full
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spelling doaj-50949cfe29344266a748a91b20d8e4e72020-11-24T22:29:49ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Psychology1664-10782014-10-01510.3389/fpsyg.2014.0122492905A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objectsRegine eKolinsky0Tânia eFernandes1Université Libre de Bruxelles (ULB)University of LisbonBased on the neuronal recycling hypothesis (Dehaene & Cohen, 2007), we examined whether reading acquisition has a cost for the recognition of nonlinguistic visual materials. More specifically, we checked whether the ability to discriminate between mirror images, which develops through literacy acquisition, interferes with object identity judgments, and whether interference strength varies as a function of the nature of the nonlinguistic material. To these aims we presented illiterate, late literate (who learned to read at adult age), and early literate adults with an orientation-independent, identity-based same-different comparison task in which they had to respond same to both physically identical and mirrored or plane-rotated images of pictures of familiar objects (Experiment 1) or of geometric shapes (Experiment 2). Interference from irrelevant orientation variations was stronger with plane rotations than with mirror images, and stronger with geometric shapes than with objects. Illiterates were the only participants almost immune to mirror variations, but only for familiar objects. Thus, the process of unlearning mirror-image generalization, necessary to acquire literacy in the Latin alphabet, has a cost for a basic function of the visual ventral object recognition stream, i.e., identification of familiar objects. This demonstrates that neural recycling is not just an adaptation to multi-use but a process of at least partial exaptation.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01224/fullvisual object recognitionliteracyventral streammirror imagesenantiomorphy
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Regine eKolinsky
Tânia eFernandes
spellingShingle Regine eKolinsky
Tânia eFernandes
A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
Frontiers in Psychology
visual object recognition
literacy
ventral stream
mirror images
enantiomorphy
author_facet Regine eKolinsky
Tânia eFernandes
author_sort Regine eKolinsky
title A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
title_short A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
title_full A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
title_fullStr A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
title_full_unstemmed A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
title_sort cultural side effect: learning to read interferes with identity processing of familiar objects
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Psychology
issn 1664-1078
publishDate 2014-10-01
description Based on the neuronal recycling hypothesis (Dehaene & Cohen, 2007), we examined whether reading acquisition has a cost for the recognition of nonlinguistic visual materials. More specifically, we checked whether the ability to discriminate between mirror images, which develops through literacy acquisition, interferes with object identity judgments, and whether interference strength varies as a function of the nature of the nonlinguistic material. To these aims we presented illiterate, late literate (who learned to read at adult age), and early literate adults with an orientation-independent, identity-based same-different comparison task in which they had to respond same to both physically identical and mirrored or plane-rotated images of pictures of familiar objects (Experiment 1) or of geometric shapes (Experiment 2). Interference from irrelevant orientation variations was stronger with plane rotations than with mirror images, and stronger with geometric shapes than with objects. Illiterates were the only participants almost immune to mirror variations, but only for familiar objects. Thus, the process of unlearning mirror-image generalization, necessary to acquire literacy in the Latin alphabet, has a cost for a basic function of the visual ventral object recognition stream, i.e., identification of familiar objects. This demonstrates that neural recycling is not just an adaptation to multi-use but a process of at least partial exaptation.
topic visual object recognition
literacy
ventral stream
mirror images
enantiomorphy
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fpsyg.2014.01224/full
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