“…Second, the posterior network for integrating letters and speech sounds not only uses temporal proximity, but also content to determine if letter-speech sound pairs constitute meaningful associations. One issue remains open however; all the above studies were conducted with fully transparent letter-sound pairs; the used letters were always pronounced the same in each of the involved orthographies, respectively Finnish, Japanese Kana , 2007aFroyen et al, 2008Froyen et al, , 2010Blau et al, 2009. if letter-sound relations are processed in a similar fashion in an extremely opaque orthography like English, in which the relations between letters and speech sounds are deeply ambiguous (Share, 2008) and children often initially learn to associate letter names, and not speech sounds, with letters (e.g., Evans et al, 2006).…”