16:30 - 18:00
Parallel sessions 3
16:30 - 18:00
Room: HSZ - N3
Chair/s:
Jack E Taylor, Janos Pauli
Written script, including numbers, letters, and letter-strings, is a recent cultural invention central to letter- and number-literate societies. In such societies, humans learn early on to recognise glyphs and map them fluently onto specific sounds and concepts. This symposium explores how the brain achieves this objective, using multiple complementary lenses to understand the processing of linguistic and mathematical symbols, the degree to which these representations are distinct, and interactions between visual symbol recognition and abstract processes of language and numerosity.

The first talk introduces a predictive coding-motivated computational model of letter recognition, showing how these principles might explain the recognition of letters in noisy environments. This work suggests that predictive coding accounts of word recognition may also apply to isolated letters. The second talk uses an optimal transport framework to model the space of early visual representations of letter symbols revealed by EEG, exploring how such representations may be altered in dyslexia. This work tests whether this learning disorder in reading also results in weaker neural alignment with computational models of letter representations. The third talk presents an analysis of human fMRI and macaque electrocorticography responses to naturalistic images, suggesting a shared prominent representation of stimuli related to both orthography and numerosity. This finding is discussed in relation to the notion of proto-architecture for mathematical cognition in the higher-level visual cortex of non-human primates. The fourth talk examines interactions between the processing of Arabic digits and language. This study exploits the discrepancy between the base-10 system of Arabic numbers and base-20 system of French number words, finding that native French speakers utilise language during a numerical task, even when language is redundant. The fifth talk explores how the brain processes words with varying degrees of misspelling. Using MEG data, it examines connectivity between lower visual areas and the lvOT, suggesting that lvOT processes real words in a feedforward manner but engages feedback mechanisms for misspelled words and pseudowords.

Combining experimental and computational approaches, this symposium advances our understanding of how the brain maps arbitrary visual forms into meaningful symbolic representations, and how these processes interact with language and numerosity.
Submission 270
Linguistic Influences on Two-Digit Number Processing in French Speakers
SymposiumTalk-04
Presented by: Roman Janssen
Roman JanssenAndré KnopsArnaud ViarougeElise Klein
LaPsyDÉ (UMR 8040), Paris Cité University, France
Although Arabic numerals are universal across cultures, studies on languages with inverted number word syntax suggest that spoken language modulates the processing of Arabic digits. The current study investigated how verbal codes influence the processing of visual digits by exploiting a unique linguistic quirk in French where numbers above 60 follow a vigesimal (base-20) system (e.g., 72 = “soixante-douze” or “60-12”).

Sixty native French speakers performed a magnitude comparison task with two-digit Arabic numbers. Beyond the classic unit-decade compatibility effect (UDCE) driven by decimal structure, linear mixed models additionally uncovered a unit-vigintade compatibility effect (UVCE) for numbers above 60, mirroring the base-20 syntax of French number words. The decimal within-decade effect also had a vigesimal equivalent: Within-vigintade pairs (e.g., 86 vs. 95) were processed as quickly as within-decade pairs (e.g., 82 vs. 85) and faster than between-vigintade pairs (e.g., 76 vs. 85).

These vigesimal effects indicate that language is not merely a tool for expressing quantities but an active scaffold for interpreting visual symbols, even when the number word is task-irrelevant. By showing how cultural-linguistic conventions influence symbolic processing, this work bridges visual number recognition with higher-order language systems, illuminating how the meaning of symbols is accessed through via linguistic representations.