Sentence Syntax and Content in the Human Temporal Lobe: An fMRI Adaptation Study in Auditory and Visual Modalities

被引:34
作者
Devauchelle, Anne-Dominique [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Oppenheim, Catherine [4 ]
Rizzi, Luigi [5 ]
Dehaene, Stanislas [2 ,6 ]
Pallier, Christophe [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] CEA SAC DSV DRM Neurospin, INSERM, U562, F-91191 Gif Sur Yvette, France
[2] CEA, DSV I2BM, NeuroSpin Ctr, Gif Sur Yvette, France
[3] Univ Paris Sud, Orsay, France
[4] Univ Paris 05, Ctr Hosp St Anne, Paris, France
[5] Univ Siena, CISCL, I-53100 Siena, Italy
[6] Coll France, F-75231 Paris, France
关键词
COMPREHENSION; REPRESENTATION; SURFACE; CORTEX;
D O I
10.1162/jocn.2009.21070
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
Priming effects have been well documented in behavioral psycholinguistics experiments: The processing of a word or a sentence is typically facilitated when it shares lexico-semantic or syntactic features with a previously encountered stimulus. Here, we used fMRI priming to investigate which brain areas show adaptation to the repetition of a sentence's content or syntax. Participants read or listened to sentences organized in series which could or not share similar syntactic constructions and/or lexico-semantic content. The repetition of lexico-semantic content yielded adaptation in most of the temporal and frontal sentence processing network, both in the visual and the auditory modalities, even when the same lexico-semantic content was expressed using variable syntactic constructions. No fMRI adaptation effect was observed when the same syntactic construction was repeated. Yet behavioral priming was observed at both syntactic and semantic levels in a separate experiment where participants detected sentence endings. We discuss a number of possible explanations for the absence of syntactic priming in the fMRI experiments, including the possibility that the conglomerate of syntactic properties defining "a construction" is not an actual object assembled during parsing.
引用
收藏
页码:1000 / 1012
页数:13
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]  
Bever T. G., 1970, COGNITION DEV LANGUA, P279, DOI DOI 10.1093/ACPROF:OSO/9780199677139.003.0001
[2]   SYNTACTIC PERSISTENCE IN LANGUAGE PRODUCTION [J].
BOCK, JK .
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, 1986, 18 (03) :355-387
[3]   Persistent structural priming from language comprehension to language production [J].
Bock, Kathryn ;
Dell, Gary S. ;
Chang, Franklin ;
Onishi, Kristine H. .
COGNITION, 2007, 104 (03) :437-458
[4]   Syntactic Priming [J].
Branigan, Holly .
LANGUAGE AND LINGUISTICS COMPASS, 2007, 1 (1-2) :1-16
[5]   Priming prepositional-phrase attachment during comprehension [J].
Branigan, HP ;
Pickering, MJ ;
McLean, JF .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY-LEARNING MEMORY AND COGNITION, 2005, 31 (03) :468-481
[6]   Syntactic priming in spoken production: Linguistic and temporal interference [J].
Branigan, HP ;
Pickering, MJ ;
Stewart, AJ ;
McLean, JF .
MEMORY & COGNITION, 2000, 28 (08) :1297-1302
[7]   PET studies of syntactic processing with auditory sentence presentation [J].
Caplan, D ;
Alpert, N ;
Waters, G .
NEUROIMAGE, 1999, 9 (03) :343-351
[8]   Common and segregated neuronal networks for different languages revealed using functional magnetic resonance adaptation [J].
Chee, MWL ;
Soon, CS ;
Lee, HL .
JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2003, 15 (01) :85-97
[9]   Distinct unimodal and multimodal regions for word processing in the left temporal cortex [J].
Cohen, L ;
Jobert, A ;
Le Bihan, D ;
Dehaene, S .
NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 23 (04) :1256-1270
[10]  
Davis MH, 2003, J NEUROSCI, V23, P3423