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Dive into the research topics where Tania Fernandes is active.

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Featured researches published by Tania Fernandes.


Journal of Experimental Psychology: General | 2011

Enantiomorphy through the looking glass: literacy effects on mirror-image discrimination.

Régine Kolinsky; Arlette Verhaeghe; Tania Fernandes; Elias José Mengarda; Loni Grimm-Cabral; Jose Morais

To examine whether enantiomorphy (i.e., the ability to discriminate lateral mirror images) is influenced by the acquisition of a written system that incorporates mirrored letters (e.g., b and d), unschooled illiterate adults were compared with people reading the Latin alphabet, namely, both schooled literate adults and unschooled adults alphabetized in adulthood. In various sorting and same-different comparison tasks with nonlinguistic materials, illiterate participants displayed some sensitivity to enantiomorphic contrasts but performed far worse than all the other participant groups when the task required paying attention to such contrasts. The difficulties of illiterate participants were more severe with enantiomorphs than with rotations in the plane or shape contrasts. Learning a written system that incorporates enantiomorphic letters thus pushes the beginning reader to break the mirror invariance characteristic of the visual system, and this process generalizes beyond the realm of symbolic characters.


Neuroscience Letters | 2013

Literacy acquisition reduces the influence of automatic holistic processing of faces and houses

Paulo Ventura; Tania Fernandes; Laurent Cohen; José Morais; Régine Kolinsky; Stanislas Dehaene

Writing was invented too recently to have influenced the human genome. Consequently, reading acquisition must rely on partial recycling of pre-existing brain systems. Prior fMRI evidence showed that in literates a left-hemispheric visual region increases its activation to written strings relative to illiterates and reduces its response to faces. Increasing literacy also leads to a stronger right-hemispheric lateralization for faces. Here, we evaluated whether this reorganization of the brains face system has behavioral consequences for the processing of non-linguistic visual stimuli. Three groups of adult illiterates, ex-illiterates and literates were tested with the sequential composite face paradigm that evaluates the automaticity with which faces are processed as wholes. Illiterates were consistently more holistic than participants with reading experience in dealing with faces. A second experiment replicated this effect with both faces and houses. Brain reorganization induced by literacy seems to reduce the influence of automatic holistic processing of faces and houses by enabling the use of a more analytic and flexible processing strategy, at least when holistic processing is detrimental to the task.


Attention Perception & Psychophysics | 2010

The impact of attention load on the use of statistical information and coarticulation as speech segmentation cues.

Tania Fernandes; Régine Kolinsky; Paulo Ventura

In two artificial language learning experiments, we investigated the impact of attention load on segmenting speech through two sublexical cues: transitional probabilities (TPs) and coarticulation. In Experiment 1, we observed that coarticulation processing was resilient to high attention load, whereas TP computation was penalized in a graded manner. In Experiment 2, we showed that encouraging participants to actively search for “word” candidates enhanced overall performance but was not sufficient to preclude the impairment of statistically driven segmentation by attention load. As long as attentional resources were depleted, independently of their intention to find these “words,” participants segmented only TP words with the highest TPs, not TP words with lower TPs. Attention load thus has a graded and differential impact on the relative weighting of the cues in speech segmentation, even when only sublexical cues are available in the signal.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2014

A cultural side effect: Learning to read interferes with object identity processing

Régine Kolinsky; Tania Fernandes


Archive | 2016

The impact of learning to read on visual processing

Tania Fernandes; Régine Kolinsky


Archive | 2016

From illiteracy to literacy in adulthood: A microlongitudinal study: symposium “Literacy and phonological skills: a reciprocal relationship?

Ana Franco; Isabel Leite; Cristina Carvalho; Régine Kolinsky; Tania Fernandes; Axelle Calcus


Archive | 2015

When does literacy start to impact on visual processing?: Evidence from preschool children and illiterate adults

Tania Fernandes; Isabel Leite; Régine Kolinsky


Archive | 2015

Task-dependent changes in mirror-image sensitivity in the human ventral and dorsal visual streams

Dinh Ha Duy Thuy; Kimihiro Nakamura; Tania Fernandes; Hidenao Fukuyama; Régine Kolinsky


Archive | 2013

The impact of literacy on visual object recognition: Evidence from Japanese readers

Tania Fernandes; Pas M; Régine Kolinsky; Kimihiro Nakamura


Proceedings of the Experimental Psychology Society: Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology, 64, 2470 | 2011

Enantiomorphy through the Looking-Glass: Literacy acquisition and the processing of mirror images

Régine Kolinsky; Jose Morais; Arlette Verhaeghe; Tania Fernandes

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Régine Kolinsky

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Jose Morais

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Chotiga Pattamadilok

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Olivier Klein

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Ana Franco

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Axelle Calcus

Université libre de Bruxelles

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