Perplexity of utterances in untreated first-episode psychosis: an ultra-high field MRI dynamic causal modelling study of the semantic network

被引:2
作者
Alonso-Sanchez, Maria Francisca [1 ]
Hinzen, Wolfram [2 ,3 ]
He, Rui [2 ]
Gati, Joseph [4 ,5 ]
Palaniyappan, Lena [4 ,5 ,6 ]
机构
[1] Univ Valparaiso, Escuela Fonoaudiol, CIDCL, Valparaiso, Chile
[2] Univ Pompeu Fabra, Dept Translat & Language Sci, Barcelona, Spain
[3] Intitut Catala Recerca & Estudis Avancats ICREA, Barcelona, Spain
[4] Western Univ, Robarts Res Inst, Schulich Sch Med & Dent, London, ON, Canada
[5] Western Univ, Schulich Sch Med & Dent, Dept Med Biophys, London, ON, Canada
[6] McGill Univ, Douglas Mental Hlth Univ Inst, Dept Psychiat, Montreal, PQ, Canada
来源
JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY & NEUROSCIENCE | 2024年 / 49卷 / 04期
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
ANTERIOR TEMPORAL-LOBE; LANGUAGE; REPRESENTATION; GYRUS;
D O I
10.1503/jpn.240031
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Background: Psychosis involves a distortion of thought content, which is partly reflected in anomalous ways in which words are semantically connected into utterances in speech. We sought to explore how these linguistic anomalies are realized through putative circuit-level abnormalities in the brain's semantic network.Methods: Using a computational large-language model, Bidirectional Encoder Representations from Transformers (BERT), we quantified the contextual expectedness of a given word sequence (perplexity) across 180 samples obtained from descriptions of 3 pictures by patients with first-episode schizophrenia (FES) and controls matched for age, parental social status, and sex, scanned with 7 T ultra-high field functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). Subsequently, perplexity was used to parametrize a spectral dynamic causal model (DCM) of the effective connectivity within (intrinsic) and between (extrinsic) 4 key regions of the semantic network at rest, namely the anterior temporal lobe, the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), the posterior middle temporal gyrus (MTG), and the angular gyrus.Results: We included 60 participants, including 30 patients with FES and 30 controls. We observed higher perplexity in the FES group, indicating that speech was less predictable by the preceding context among patients. Results of Bayesian model comparisons showed that a DCM including the group by perplexity interaction best explained the underlying patterns of neural activity. We observed an increase of self-inhibitory effective connectivity within the IFG, as well as reduced self-inhibitory tone within the pMTG, in the FES group. An increase in self-inhibitory tone in the IFG correlated strongly and positively with inter-regional excitation between the IFG and posterior MTG, while self-inhibition of the posterior MTG was negatively correlated with this interregional excitation.Limitation: Our design did not address connectivity in the semantic network during tasks that selectively activated the semantic network, which could corroborate findings from this resting-state fMRI study. Furthermore, we do not present a replication study, which would ideally use speech in a different language.Conclusion: As an explanation for peculiar speech in psychosis, these results index a shift in the excitatory-inhibitory balance regulating information flow across the semantic network, confined to 2 regions that were previously linked specifically to the executive control of meaning. Based on our approach of combining a large language model with causal connectivity estimates, we propose loss in semantic control as a potential neurocognitive mechanism contributing to disorganization in psychosis.
引用
收藏
页码:E252 / E262
页数:11
相关论文
共 53 条
  • [1] Rapid Interactions of Widespread Brain Networks Characterize Semantic Cognition
    Aboud, Katherine S.
    Nguyen, Tin Q.
    Del Tufo, Stephanie N.
    Chang, Catie
    Zald, David H.
    Key, Alexandra P.
    Price, Gavin R.
    Landman, Bennett A.
    Cutting, Laurie E.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2023, 43 (01) : 142 - 154
  • [2] Computational Modeling of Electroencephalography and Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Paradigms Indicates a Consistent Loss of Pyramidal Cell Synaptic Gain in Schizophrenia
    Adams, Rick A.
    Pinotsis, Dimitris
    Tsirlis, Konstantinos
    Unruh, Leonhardt
    Mahajan, Aashna
    Horas, Ana Montero
    Convertino, Laura
    Summerfelt, Ann
    Sampath, Hemalatha
    Du, Xiaoming Michael
    Kochunov, Peter
    Ji, Jie Lisa
    Repovs, Grega
    Murray, John D.
    Friston, Karl J.
    Hong, L. Elliot
    Anticevic, Alan
    [J]. BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 91 (02) : 202 - 215
  • [3] Semantic priming and neurobiology in schizophrenia: A theoretical review
    Almeida, Victor N.
    Radanovic, Marcia
    [J]. NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA, 2021, 163
  • [4] Language network self-inhibition and semantic similarity in first-episode schizophrenia: A computational-linguistic and effective connectivity approach
    Alonso-Sanchez, Maria Francisca
    Limongi, Roberto
    Gati, Joseph
    Palaniyappan, Lena
    [J]. SCHIZOPHRENIA RESEARCH, 2023, 259 : 97 - 103
  • [5] Deep Artificial Neural Networks Reveal a Distributed Cortical Network Encoding Propositional Sentence-Level Meaning
    Anderson, Andrew James
    Kiela, Douwe
    Binder, Jeffrey R.
    Fernandino, Leonardo
    Humphries, Colin J.
    Conant, Lisa L.
    Raizada, Rajeev D. S.
    Grimm, Scott
    Lalor, Edmund C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2021, 41 (18) : 4100 - 4119
  • [6] The default network and self-generated thought: component processes, dynamic control, and clinical relevance
    Andrews-Hanna, Jessica R.
    Smallwood, Jonathan
    Spreng, R. Nathan
    [J]. YEAR IN COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2014, 1316 : 29 - 52
  • [7] Elements of creative thought: Investigating the cognitive and neural correlates of association and bi-association processes
    Benedek, Mathias
    Jurisch, Julian
    Koschutnig, Karl
    Fink, Andreas
    Beaty, Roger E.
    [J]. NEUROIMAGE, 2020, 210
  • [8] Where Is the Semantic System? A Critical Review and Meta-Analysis of 120 Functional Neuroimaging Studies
    Binder, Jeffrey R.
    Desai, Rutvik H.
    Graves, William W.
    Conant, Lisa L.
    [J]. CEREBRAL CORTEX, 2009, 19 (12) : 2767 - 2796
  • [9] Controlled semantic cognition relies upon dynamic and flexible interactions between the executive 'semantic control' and hub-and-spoke 'semantic representation' systems
    Chiou, Rocco
    Humphreys, Gina F.
    Jung, JeYoung
    Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon
    [J]. CORTEX, 2018, 103 : 100 - 116
  • [10] Ameta-analysisof functional magnetic resonance imaging studies of divergent thinking using activation likelihood estimation
    Cogdell-Brooke, Lucy S.
    Sowden, Paul T.
    Violante, Ines R.
    Thompson, Hannah E.
    [J]. HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2020, 41 (17) : 5057 - 5077