Modulation of the semantic system by word imageability

被引:263
作者
Sabsevitz, DS
Medler, DA
Seidenberg, M
Binder, JR
机构
[1] Med Coll Wisconsin, Dept Neurol, Div Neuropscyhol, Language Imaging Lab, Milwaukee, WI 53226 USA
[2] Rosalind Franklin Univ Med & Sci, Dept Psychol, N Chicago, IL 60064 USA
关键词
semantic system; word imageability; sensory-motor representation; fMRI; abstract noun;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2005.04.012
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
A prevailing neurobiological theory of semantic memory proposes that part of our knowledge about concrete, highly imageable concepts is stored in the form of sensory-motor representations. While this theory predicts differential activation of the semantic system by concrete and abstract words, previous functional imaging studies employing this contrast have provided relatively little supporting evidence. We acquired event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data while participants performed a semantic similarity judgment task on a large number of concrete and abstract noun triads. Task difficulty was manipulated by varying the degree to which the words in the triad were similar in meaning. Concrete nouns, relative to abstract nouns, produced greater activation in a bilateral network of multimodal and heteromodal association areas, including ventral and medial temporal, posterior-inferior parietal, dorsal prefrontal, and posterior cingulate cortex. In contrast, abstract nouns produced greater activation almost exclusively in the left hemisphere in superior temporal and inferior frontal cortex. Increasing task difficulty modulated activation mainly in attention, working memory, and response monitoring systems, with almost no effect on areas that were modulated by imageability. These data provide critical support for the hypothesis that concrete, imageable concepts activate perceptually based representations not available to abstract concepts. In contrast, processing abstract concepts makes greater demands on left perisylvian phonological and lexical retrieval systems. The findings are compatible with dual coding theory and less consistent with single-code models of conceptual representation. The lack of overlap between imageability and task difficulty effects suggests that once the neural representation of a concept is activated, further maintenance and manipulation of that information in working memory does not further increase neural activation in the conceptual store. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:188 / 200
页数:13
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