Authors
Li, J., Hiersche, K., Aryeetey, N.-A., Quatrale, A., Resnick, P., Saygin, Z. M.
Abstract
The visual word form area (VWFA) is a hallmark of literacy in the human brain. Alongside reading acquisition, the functional organization of the ventral temporal cortex (VTC) undergoes substantial changes. However, it remains unclear what factors uniquely drive the emergence and continued development of the VWFA, or more broadly shaping category selectivity across the VTC. Here, we combined cross-sectional and longitudinal data from children in early childhood (3-9 years) to investigate the development of visual language selectivity. We found that after controlling for age, literacy acquisition drove increases in word selectivity of the VWFA, but not the continued development of other early-developed category selectivity. Sensitivity to spoken higher-level language information within the VWFA was also associated with reading ability. By projecting the VWFA defined at the later time point onto each child's earlier time point, we also found that the pre-VWFA showed no preferential tuning to any particular visual category. Finally, longitudinal changes within the VWFA, both increased responses to visually presented words and decreased responses to auditory control conditions, were associated with changes in functional connectivity of VWFA to high-level language regions, even after controlling for initial activity levels. Together, the current study shows a unique role for literacy acquisition and experience-dependent connectivity changes in the emergence and functional specialization of the VWFA, providing empirical evidence for the revised neuronal recycling hypothesis and connectivity hypothesis of functional brain organization.
Preprint server:
bioRxiv
The authors list and abstract were imported from bioRxiv on 29 Jun 2026.
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