| Literature DB >> 23565102 |
Corey T McMillan1, Danielle Coleman, Robin Clark, Tsao-Wei Liang, Rachel G Gross, Murray Grossman.
Abstract
Traditional neuroanatomic models of language comprehension have emphasized a core language network situated in peri-Sylvian cortex. More recent evidence appears to extend the neuroanatomic network beyond peri-Sylvian cortex to encompass other aspects of sentence processing. In this study, we evaluate the neuroanatomic basis for processing the ambiguity in doubly-quantified sentences. For example, a sentence like "All the dogs jumped in a lake" can be interpreted with a collective interpretation (e.g., several dogs jumping into a single lake) or a distributive interpretation (e.g., several dogs each jumping into a different lake). In Experiment 1, we used BOLD fMRI to investigate neuroanatomic recruitment by young adults during the interpretation of ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences in a sentence-picture verification task. We observed that young adults exhibited a processing cost associated with interpreting ambiguous sentences and this was related to frontal and parietal cortex recruitment. In Experiment 2, we investigate ambiguous sentence processing with the identical materials in non-aphasic patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) who have frontal cortex disease and executive and decision-making limitations. bvFTD patients are insensitive to ambiguity associated with doubly-quantified sentences, and this is related to the magnitude of their frontal cortex disease. These studies provide converging evidence that cortical regions that extend beyond peri-Sylvian cortex help support the processing costs associated with the interpretation of ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences.Entities:
Keywords: fMRI; frontotemporal dementia; language; quantifiers; volumetric MRI
Year: 2013 PMID: 23565102 PMCID: PMC3613595 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00153
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Mean (Standard Error) demographic characteristics of (A) healthy young adults in the functional MRI experiment (Experiment 1) and (B) healthy seniors and behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) patients from behavioral Experiment 2.
| Experiment | Age | Education | MMSE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy young adults | 16 | 23.4 (0.6) | 16.3 (0.4) | – |
| bvFTD | 16 | 64.3 (2.0) | 15.4 (0.8) | 24.7 (1.2) |
| Healthy Seniors | 16 | 64.4 (2.0) | 14.3 (0.5) | 29.1 (0.3) |
Figure 1Sample stimulus images for experimental sentence materials.
Figure 2Response times (ms) for healthy young adults for unambiguous baseline sentences and ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences.
Figure 3Regions of activation observed in whole-brain analysis for ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences minus baseline unambiguous sentences.
Regions of activation for doubly-quantified sentences minus baseline sentences (.
| Neuroanatomic Region (BA) | L/R | Peak MNI coordinate | Voxels | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Inferior parietal (40/7) | L | −32 | −60 | 54 | 4.02 | 209 |
| Rostral prefrontal (10) | R | 24 | 60 | −6 | 3.74 | 28 |
| Posterior-lateral temporal (22) | L | −54 | −44 | 8 | 4.01 | 40 |
| Inferior frontal (45) | L | −46 | 18 | 20 | 4.88 | 906 |
| Dorsomedial prefrontal (6) | M | 4 | 16 | 54 | 3.94 | 30 |
Figure 4Response times (ms) for bvFTD patients and healthy seniors for unambiguous baseline sentences and ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences.
Figure 5(A) Colored regions (pink and yellow) represent regions of significantly reduced gray matter density for behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) patients relative to healthy seniors (p < 0.05 FDR; 100 voxel extent) and yellow regions represent overlapping reduced density with fMRI activation for healthy young adults in Experiment 1; (B) A significant correlation between an overlapping region in dorsolateral prefrontal cortex correlates with response times for ambiguous doubly-quantified sentences.
Regions of significantly reduced gray matter density in bvFTD patients relative to demographically matched healthy seniors (.
| Neuroanatomic Region (BA) | L/R | Peak MNI coordinate | Voxels | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rostromedial prefrontal (10) | M | −6 | 50 | 16 | 4.63 | 4163 |
| Rostral prefrontal (10) | L | −26 | 52 | 4 | 4.31 | 297 |
| Rostral prefrontal (10) | L | −26 | 44 | 30 | 3.96 | 254 |
| Inferior frontal (44/45) | R | 50 | 4 | 22 | 3.81 | 385 |
| Dorsolateral prefrontal (9) | L | −40 | 2 | 38 | 4.11 | 154 |
| Anterior cingulate (24) | L | −18 | −10 | 24 | 3.77 | 111 |
| Insula (12) | L | −38 | 12 | 4 | 3.29 | 135 |
| Medial temporal (21) | L | −38 | −24 | −16 | 4.17 | 578 |
| Anterior temporal (38) | L | −36 | 8 | −26 | 3.86 | 176 |
| Anterior temporal (38) | R | 42 | 10 | −30 | 3.76 | 347 |
| Posterior-lateral temporal (22) | R | 52 | −26 | 0 | 3.54 | 110 |
Regions of overlap between fMRI activation in healthy young adults and reduced gray matter density in bvFTD patients relative to healthy seniors.
| Neuroanatomic Region (BA) | L/R | Centroid MNI Coordinate | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| x | y | z | ||
| Dorsolateral prefrontal (9) | L | −46 | 6 | 38 |
| Rostral prefrontal (10) | R | 22 | 58 | −6 |
| Inferior frontal (45) | L | −36 | 18 | 22 |
| Ventrolateral prefrontal (47) | L | −34 | 30 | −2 |
| Dorsolateral prefrontal (9) | L | −42 | 20 | 30 |