Literature DB >> 12807412

Semantic categorization in the human brain: spatiotemporal dynamics revealed by magnetoencephalography.

Andreas Löw1, Shlomo Bentin, Brigitte Rockstroh, Yaron Silberman, Annette Gomolla, Rudolf Cohen, Thomas Elbert.   

Abstract

We examined the cortical representation of semantic categorization using magnetic source imaging in a task that revealed both dissociations among superordinate categories and associations among different base-level concepts within these categories. Around 200 ms after stimulus onset, the spatiotemporal correlation of brain activity elicited by base-level concepts was greater within than across superordinate categories in the right temporal lobe. Unsupervised clustering of data showed similar categorization between 210 and 450 ms mainly in the left hemisphere. This pattern suggests that well-defined semantic categories are represented in spatially distinct, macroscopically separable neural networks, independent of physical stimulus properties. In contrast, a broader, task-required categorization (natural/man-made) was not evident in our data. The perceptual dynamics of the categorization process is initially evident in the extrastriate areas of the right hemisphere; this activation is followed by higher-level activity along the ventral processing stream, implicating primarily the left temporal lobe.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12807412     DOI: 10.1111/1467-9280.24451

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychol Sci        ISSN: 0956-7976


  10 in total

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7.  Disordered semantic representation in schizophrenic temporal cortex revealed by neuromagnetic response patterns.

Authors:  Andreas Löw; Brigitte Rockstroh; Thomas Elbert; Yaron Silberman; Shlomo Bentin
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Authors:  Ramin Assadollahi; Brigitte Rockstroh
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9.  Dynamic information processing states revealed through neurocognitive models of object semantics.

Authors:  Alex Clarke
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  10 in total

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