Abstract
A child who is learning to read, a fluent adult reader, and a scholar who spends his days in analytical and syntopical engagement with texts differ from one another in what they can do with print. They also differ in what their brains do with print. This paper surveys what is known about the neural signatures of reading expertise, moving from the well-documented contrast between beginning and fluent readers through the less well-charted but increasingly studied differences between fluent readers and those who have pressed further into analytical and syntopical reading. The evidence for the first transition is substantial; the evidence for the second is thinner but growing, drawn from studies of high-level comprehension, literary reading, expert versus novice reading comparisons, and the broader cognitive neuroscience of expertise. The central claim is that reading expertise reshapes the brain at every level of its development, not only during the construction of the basic reading network but in the subsequent years and decades during which analytical and syntopical reading habits take root. Taking this seriously means recognizing that there is no stable destination called “fluent reading” beyond which further reading makes no neural difference. The reading brain keeps being made as long as the reader keeps reading.
1. Introduction
Earlier papers in this series have argued that reading is not natural, that certain pre-reading capacities predict later reading success, and that a specific cortical region called the Visual Word Form Area comes to specialize in letter-string recognition through instruction. Each of these papers has dealt, in effect, with the making of the basic reader. This paper takes up the question of what happens after. A child who has achieved fluent decoding is not yet a mature reader. There are years of development ahead, culminating, in some readers, in the analytical and syntopical capacities that allow a person to interrogate a single text deeply or to hold many texts in productive conversation. The neural correlates of these later stages are the subject of the present paper.
The evidence for neural differences between beginning and fluent readers is now extensive, drawn from thirty years of functional imaging, structural neuroanatomy, and longitudinal tracking. The evidence for neural differences between merely fluent readers and expert readers—those who have become adept at the higher levels of reading—is more recent and more scattered, relying on studies of comprehension, of literary and academic reading, of expert-novice comparisons in other cognitive domains, and on a small but growing body of direct research into high-level reading itself. The present paper surveys both bodies of evidence, acknowledging frankly where the findings are solid and where they are suggestive.
2. Beginning Readers and Fluent Readers: The First Transition
The transition from beginning to fluent reading has been studied more thoroughly than almost any other developmental cognitive transition. The general picture is now clear, and several recurring findings have emerged.
A beginning reader engages in explicit, laborious decoding. Each word is assembled from its letters, the letters from their sounds, and the result is held in working memory long enough for its meaning to be retrieved. At the neural level, this process recruits an extensive and effortful network. Activation is high in phonological regions of the left temporoparietal cortex, which handles the sound structure of words, and in frontal regions that manage the attentional and working-memory demands of the task. The Visual Word Form Area is active but not yet sharply tuned for whole-word recognition. The overall pattern is one of effortful recruitment of multiple systems in service of a task that has not yet been automatized.
A fluent reader, by contrast, shows a pattern that might be called economy of activation. The Visual Word Form Area responds rapidly and selectively to printed words, recognizing them as whole visual units without the need for letter-by-letter assembly. The phonological regions still participate, but their activation is less effortful and more efficient. The frontal regions responsible for attention and working memory are less heavily recruited, freed from the decoding burden. The overall pattern is one of faster, more direct, more automatized processing, with the cognitive effort that once went into decoding now available for comprehension.
This shift is accompanied by changes in the white-matter tracts that connect the relevant regions. The arcuate fasciculus and several other major pathways show increases in structural integrity as children become fluent readers, and the strength of these tracts in childhood predicts later reading performance. The reading network is not only being used more efficiently; its physical infrastructure is being strengthened.
The transition from beginner to fluent reader is also marked by what might be called a leftward consolidation. Early reading recruits regions in both hemispheres, partly because children often rely on right-hemisphere visual processing while the left-hemisphere reading network is still being built. As reading matures, the network consolidates in the left hemisphere, with the Visual Word Form Area and the classical language regions taking on a dominant role and right-hemisphere contributions receding to the support of specific functions like prosody, discourse integration, and attention management. This consolidation is not absolute, but the trend is consistent enough to be a reliable marker of reading development.
A final feature of this transition is automatization. A fluent reader cannot look at a familiar word without reading it, as the well-known Stroop effect demonstrates. The reading response has become involuntary, triggered by the sight of print as reliably as other over-learned responses are triggered by their proper stimuli. Automatization is not merely a matter of speed; it is a matter of processing occurring without conscious direction, freeing conscious attention for tasks other than the mechanics of reading. This is the neural and behavioral condition that makes higher-level reading possible at all.
3. What Fluent Reading Is and Is Not
Before moving to the next transition, it is worth pausing on what fluent reading accomplishes and what it does not. Fluent reading means that the decoding of words has become automatic. It does not mean that the understanding of texts has become automatic. A fluent reader can read the words of a difficult passage and still fail to grasp its argument, its structure, its implications, or its relation to other things he has read. Fluency is a necessary but not sufficient condition for mature reading. It is the floor, not the ceiling.
This distinction matters for interpreting the neural data. The transition from beginner to fluent reader is, to a first approximation, the automatization of the basic reading network. The transitions beyond fluent reading are something different. They are not the further automatization of the same network, because the relevant capacities are not straightforwardly amenable to automatization. Analytical reading, which involves deliberate examination of a text’s structure, argument, and implications, is by its nature a conscious and effortful process. Syntopical reading, which involves holding multiple texts in comparative view, is still more so. The neural signatures of these higher levels of reading are therefore not to be found primarily in measures of efficiency or speed but in patterns of recruitment that reflect the sustained deployment of attention, working memory, integration, and metacognition over extended engagement with text.
4. Fluent Readers and Comprehending Readers: The Next Transition
The step from fluent decoding to competent comprehension has been studied under the heading of comprehension neuroscience. Researchers present readers with texts of varying difficulty, track brain activation during reading, and sometimes test comprehension afterward. Several findings have emerged from this literature.
Reading for comprehension consistently recruits a broader network than reading for decoding alone. In addition to the basic reading network described above, readers engaged in comprehension activate regions associated with language processing beyond the word level: areas of the left temporal cortex involved in sentence integration, regions of the inferior frontal gyrus involved in syntactic and semantic resolution, and broader networks that handle discourse-level coherence. The brain is no longer only recognizing words; it is constructing a mental model of what the text says.
Comprehension also recruits regions associated with what has come to be called mentalizing or theory of mind—the capacity to represent the mental states of others. This recruitment is especially strong when readers engage with narrative, where understanding the text requires tracking what characters want, believe, and intend. But it appears also in non-narrative texts when the reader must reconstruct an author’s argument, anticipate a counterargument, or infer what is being communicated beyond what is explicitly stated. Reading for understanding, in other words, routinely engages the social-cognitive machinery that the brain uses to understand persons.
A further finding is that comprehension correlates with sustained activation in regions associated with episodic and semantic memory retrieval. Understanding a text requires drawing on what one already knows—about the world, about the subject matter, about the author, about related texts. The reader with a rich store of background knowledge and ready access to it comprehends more easily and more deeply than the reader without, and the difference is visible in the neural response to moderately demanding text. This has practical implications, already familiar from the cognitive psychology of reading: comprehension is not a content-independent skill but a skill whose exercise depends on the content the reader brings to the text.
The difference between a fluent reader who comprehends well and a fluent reader who comprehends poorly is therefore not primarily a difference in the basic reading network. It is a difference in the recruitment and integration of language networks, mentalizing networks, memory systems, and attention systems in service of understanding. This broader network can be called the comprehension network, and its development is the next phase of the reading brain’s maturation.
5. Analytical Readers: A Distinctive Pattern of Sustained Engagement
Beyond competent comprehension lies analytical reading, the deliberate, structured engagement with a single text aimed at grasping its argument, its organization, its key terms, and its propositional and stylistic claims in detail. The neural signature of analytical reading has been studied under several headings, including deep reading, literary reading, scholarly reading, and expert reading.
The findings here are less uniform than at earlier stages, partly because analytical reading is harder to define operationally than decoding or basic comprehension, and partly because analytical readers in a scanner are doing something that is not always straightforward to measure. Nevertheless, several recurring observations can be made.
Analytical reading appears to recruit the comprehension network more heavily and more persistently than ordinary reading does. When skilled readers engage in what experimenters have variously called close reading or deep reading, activation increases in the language integration regions, in the mentalizing regions, and in frontal regions associated with executive attention and working memory. The engagement is not episodic but sustained, continuing throughout the reading episode and often intensifying at points where the text presents interpretive challenges.
A particularly interesting finding concerns the distinction between reading for gist and reading for detail. When readers are asked to attend to the details of a text’s language, structure, and argument, rather than merely to its overall meaning, activation patterns shift in ways that suggest a different mode of engagement. The brain does not process a text the same way when asked to read it closely as when asked to read it casually. This is consistent with what skilled readers have always reported from the inside: close reading feels different from ordinary reading, and it appears to be different in what the brain is doing during the activity.
Expert-novice comparisons have also been informative. Studies of advanced literary scholars, classicists, legal professionals, and others whose work involves habitual analytical reading have found distinctive patterns of neural response compared to non-experts reading the same material. Experts tend to show faster initial processing of familiar structures, more extensive recruitment of integration and mentalizing regions during interpretation, and stronger connectivity among the regions involved in sustained comprehension. The expert reader is not merely doing more of what the ordinary reader does. The expert is reading in a functionally different way.
The frontal and parietal regions associated with executive attention deserve particular notice here. Analytical reading, by its nature, requires sustained direction of attention toward features of a text that would not be salient in casual reading. The reader must attend deliberately to structure, to word choice, to the relation of a sentence to what precedes it and what follows, to what is being claimed and what is being assumed. This kind of attention is controlled, not automatic, and it is supported by frontoparietal networks that show distinctive engagement during analytical reading tasks. A reader who cannot sustain this kind of attention cannot read analytically, whatever his fluency with the words on the page.
It is plausible, though the direct evidence is still developing, that the habitual practice of analytical reading over years or decades produces durable changes in these frontoparietal attention networks, just as other forms of expertise produce durable changes in the networks their practice relies on. The generalization from other expertise domains to reading is not strictly demonstrated, but the convergence of evidence across domains makes the inference a reasonable one.
6. Syntopical Readers: Integration Across Texts
Syntopical reading, the comparative engagement with multiple texts on a shared question, has been studied directly in only a few neuroimaging investigations, and most of what is known about its neural basis must be inferred from related research. The practical difficulty is evident. A subject cannot easily hold four open books in a scanner, and the kind of sustained comparative thought that syntopical reading requires is hard to produce on demand in a laboratory setting. What follows is accordingly more tentative than the material in the preceding sections.
Syntopical reading is, at its core, a task of integration. The reader must hold in mind what multiple authors have said, recognize where they agree and where they disagree, construct a framework in which each author’s position can be located, and arrive at a judgment that none of the individual texts straightforwardly provides. Each of these sub-tasks engages cognitive systems that have been studied independently, and the union of those studies permits a plausible sketch of what syntopical reading looks like in the brain.
The integration itself likely depends on regions of the prefrontal cortex, particularly the lateral and anterior prefrontal areas that support the maintenance and manipulation of multiple representations in working memory, and the ventromedial prefrontal regions implicated in relational reasoning and the formation of abstract frameworks. These regions, taken together, support the kind of high-level cognitive work that syntopical reading demands, and they are known to be engaged when subjects reason across multiple sources of information in other domains.
The comparison of authors and positions likely engages mentalizing networks, because understanding where authors differ requires representing what each author is doing from the inside. The reader who compares two arguments is, in some sense, holding two minds in view. This is a demanding form of mentalizing and one that extends the ordinary social-cognitive machinery into something like a cognitive conversation with multiple interlocutors at once.
The long-term memory systems must also be heavily involved, because syntopical reading draws continually on what the reader knows from outside the immediate texts. A reader who has spent decades reading widely on a question brings to a syntopical study a fund of background information that shapes every comparison he makes. The neural instantiation of this background—the semantic networks that represent the reader’s accumulated knowledge of the domain—is presumably engaged throughout the syntopical reading episode.
If these inferences are roughly correct, then syntopical reading engages, simultaneously and in integrated fashion, the basic reading network, the comprehension network, the mentalizing networks, the frontoparietal attention networks, the working-memory systems of the prefrontal cortex, and the semantic memory networks of the temporal lobes and adjacent regions. It is, in neural terms, a maximally integrated cognitive task, demanding the coordinated operation of a substantial portion of the cerebral cortex.
This would make syntopical reading one of the most cognitively demanding activities a human being routinely undertakes. It would also make it, potentially, one of the most formative. If the brain is shaped by what it habitually does, then the brain of a lifelong syntopical reader—one who has spent years bringing multiple texts into productive conversation on important questions—is plausibly shaped by that habit in measurable and durable ways. The direct evidence for this proposition remains limited, but the indirect evidence from the broader expertise literature makes it a serious conjecture rather than an idle speculation.
7. A Note on the Limits of the Evidence
Honesty requires a few caveats at this point. The neuroimaging of high-level reading is a much younger field than the neuroimaging of basic reading. The methods available for studying analytical and syntopical reading in a laboratory setting are limited, and the phenomena themselves are difficult to elicit reliably under experimental conditions. Many of the claims in the preceding two sections are therefore supported by convergent inference from adjacent research programs rather than by a large body of direct investigation.
This should not be taken as a reason to doubt the claims, but it should be taken as a reason to hold them with appropriate humility. The neural signatures of high-level reading are real, and they are beginning to be mapped, but the mapping is at an early stage. The picture presented here is the best current synthesis of an evolving body of work, and further research will refine and in some respects correct it. What remains secure, however, is the general pattern: each level of reading expertise engages the brain in ways that earlier levels do not, and habitual practice at each level appears to shape the brain accordingly. The details will be filled in over time. The outline is already clear.
It is also worth noting that neuroimaging evidence, however revealing, does not by itself adjudicate questions about what reading is for, what it contributes to a well-formed human life, or what texts are worth the investment of the higher levels of reading. The brain does what it does; the question of which uses of the brain are most worth pursuing belongs to other disciplines. Neuroimaging tells us, for instance, that syntopical reading engages extensive cortical resources; it does not tell us which questions are worth the syntopical treatment. That judgment belongs to the reader and to the tradition in which he reads.
8. The Reading Brain Across the Lifespan
A useful way to hold the findings of this paper together is to see the reading brain as an entity that keeps being made throughout a reading life. The first years of instruction build the basic reading network, with the Visual Word Form Area and its connections as the structural center. The next several years of practice consolidate that network, automatize its operation, and extend it into the broader comprehension network as the reader takes on more demanding texts. The later years, if the reader continues to press into analytical and syntopical reading, extend the network further still, engaging attention, integration, mentalizing, and memory systems in the service of ever more demanding cognitive work.
None of these stages is a terminus. A fluent reader who stops reading demanding texts does not become an analytical reader. An analytical reader who never takes up syntopical work does not become a syntopical reader. The neural changes that correspond to each level of expertise appear to require sustained engagement with the level of reading that produces them. The brain is not lazy, but it is conservative; it builds what it is regularly required to build and maintains what it is regularly required to maintain. A reader who wishes to develop, and to sustain, the neural capacities for higher-level reading must sustain the practice that produces those capacities.
This is, in a sense, an empirical confirmation of an observation long made from the practice of reading itself. Reading well is a matter of habit, and the habits of reading are built slowly, through years of encountering texts at progressively higher levels of demand, with competent teachers, and in the company of other serious readers. The brain changes, because the person changes, and the person changes because the practice changes him. The neuroscience adds a layer of physical confirmation to what was already known by the reflective reader from the inside.
9. Implications
Several practical implications follow from the survey presented here.
First, fluency is not the goal of reading instruction; it is the foundation. A program of reading instruction that terminates with fluent decoding has built the floor and left the house unbuilt. The years after fluent decoding, during which the comprehension network matures and the analytical capacities develop, are as consequential for the eventual reader as the years before fluent decoding are. Neglecting these years in favor of testing mechanical fluency alone mistakes the beginning for the end.
Second, the higher levels of reading require sustained practice, because the neural systems they depend on require sustained use. A student who reads analytically only under compulsion, and only as much as he must, builds these systems slowly and unsustainably. A student who develops habits of analytical and syntopical reading as part of the ordinary rhythm of his intellectual life builds them deeply and durably. The distinction is not primarily one of talent; it is one of practice and habit.
Third, the reading practices that matter most for the brain are also the reading practices that matter most for the soul. The reader who engages a serious text closely, attending to its argument and its structure, or who holds multiple serious texts in comparative view, is doing work that the brain records and that the person retains. This is particularly pertinent when the texts in view are worth such engagement—Scripture most of all, along with the tradition of careful writing that has attended Scripture through the centuries. The long investment of attention, memory, and integration that serious reading requires is not wasted; it shapes the reader both neurally and in the more important sense of what kind of person he becomes.
10. Conclusion
The brains of skilled readers differ from those of beginning readers in well-documented ways: greater efficiency and automatization of the basic reading network, stronger white-matter connections among its regions, leftward consolidation of the relevant activity, and reduced demand on the working memory and attention systems that early reading so heavily taxes. The brains of analytical readers differ from those of merely fluent ones in less thoroughly documented but increasingly clear ways: heavier and more sustained engagement of the comprehension network, greater recruitment of mentalizing and integration regions, and more extensive involvement of the frontoparietal attention systems that support deliberate and sustained engagement with demanding text. The brains of syntopical readers, if the inferences from adjacent research are sound, show still more extensive and integrated engagement across multiple networks simultaneously, because the work of bringing many texts into comparative view draws on many cognitive systems at once.
The reading brain is made, and it keeps being made. There is no plateau at which the construction stops and the finished reader simply uses the neural equipment he has accumulated. Each level of reading that the reader practices continues to shape the equipment itself. This is the underlying reality behind the ancient observation that reading well is a matter of long practice in the company of worthy texts. The neural signatures of reading expertise, insofar as they are now known, confirm what the wise have always known about what reading does to those who give themselves to it.

John ElliottPresident, United Church of God