心理语言学线上论坛 | 11月3日15:00 杨炀 博士讲座
Speaker: Yang Yang
Title: The brain basis of Chinese handwriting: insights from functional and structural MRI
Time: 15:00 – 16:30 pm, Wed, 3 November 2021
(Beijing, Hong Kong time)
Venue: https://cuhk.zoom.us/j/779556638
https://cuhk.zoom.cn/j/779556638
About the speaker
Yang Yang is an assistant research professor at Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences. He received his B.Sc. from Southwest University in Chongqing, China (2008), M.Phil from Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences (2011) and Ph.D from the university of Hong Kong (2016). Yang Yang’s research interests include: 1) The cognitive and neural basis of Chinese reading and handwriting; 2) The etiology and treatment of Chinese language disorders such as dyslexia and stuttering. He has published more than 20 journal papers on these topics, and many appear in renowned journals in his filed like Developmental Science, Human Brain Mapping and Brain and Language. He serves as a peer reviewer for some fields' top journals like Science Advances, Cerebral Cortex and Human Brain Mapping.
The brain basis of Chinese handwriting: insights from functional and structural MRI
Yang Yang (yangyang@psych.ac.cn)
Institute of Psychology, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Handwriting is a complex processing that requires cognitive, linguistic and perceptual-motor operations. It plays an important part in our daily communication and reading development. However, how the brain processes handwriting in Chinese remains largely unknown. In this talk, I will present the findings of our recent work on the brain mechanisms of Chinese handwriting in children and adults using functional and structural MRI. Handwriting is broadly divided into two components: linguistic processing and motor processing. I will first present the findings from the studies on the specific brain substrates of linguistic and motor processes during Chinese handwriting. Moreover, handwriting is characterized by prominent individual differences. Second, I will discuss the findings on functional and structural correlates of individual differences in Chinese handwriting, including sex, age, personality and metacognition. Finally, abundant behavioral studies have demonstrated high comorbidity of reading and handwriting difficulties in developmental dyslexia. I will present the findings on the brain basis of handwriting difficulties in Chinese dyslexic children, as well as the extent that handwriting deficits share common neural basis with reading deficits. We argue that the investigation of the brain basis of Chinese handwriting not only advances our understanding of the cognitive architecture of handwriting, but also sheds new light on the diagnosis and treatment of handwriting difficulties.
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