| Literature DB >> 23630480 |
Liuba Papeo1, Alvaro Pascual-Leone, Alfonso Caramazza.
Abstract
Comprehension of words is an important part of the language faculty, involving the joint activity of frontal and temporo-parietal brain regions. Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) enables the controlled perturbation of brain activity, and thus offers a unique tool to test specific predictions about the causal relationship between brain regions and language understanding. This potential has been exploited to better define the role of regions that are classically accepted as part of the language-semantic network. For instance, TMS has contributed to establish the semantic relevance of the left anterior temporal lobe, or to solve the ambiguity between the semantic vs. phonological function assigned to the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG). We consider, more closely, the results from studies where the same technique, similar paradigms (lexical-semantic tasks) and materials (words) have been used to assess the relevance of regions outside the classically-defined language-semantic network-i.e., precentral motor regions-for the semantic analysis of words. This research shows that different aspects of the left precentral gyrus (primary motor and premotor sites) are sensitive to the action-non action distinction of words' meanings. However, the behavioral changes due to TMS over these sites are incongruent with what is expected after perturbation of a task-relevant brain region. Thus, the relationship between motor activity and language-semantic behavior remains far from clear. A better understanding of this issue could be guaranteed by investigating functional interactions between motor sites and semantically-relevant regions.Entities:
Keywords: action understanding; cognitive neuropsychology; language semantics; neuroimaging; neuromodulation
Year: 2013 PMID: 23630480 PMCID: PMC3633936 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Mean-group coordinates (.
| Gough et al. ( | Anterior inferior frontal gyrus | −52 | 34 | −6 |
| Pobric et al. ( | Posterior inferior frontal gyrus | −52 | 16 | 8 |
| Pobric et al. ( | Anterior temporal lobe | −53 | 4 | −32 |
| Cattaneo et al. ( | Ventral premotor cortex | −48.9 | 4.6 | 20 |
| Willems et al. ( | Dorsal premotor cortex | −35 | −1 | 53 |
All regions are in the left hemisphere. Coordinates of primary motor cortex are not reported, as researchers commonly rely on MEP amplitude to target the optimal scalp position for stimulation of this site. Where not otherwise specified, coordinated are in Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) format.
Coordinates are in Talairach format.
Figure 1Target sites in the reviewed studies. Red dots indicate the TMS targets in Gough et al. (2005); orange dot indicates the target site in Pobric et al. (2007, 2010); blue dot indicates the target in Willems et al. (2011); green dot indicates the target in Cattaneo et al. (2010); yellow dot indicates the primary motor cortex. It is not common practice to report the mean coordinates of the primary motor cortex, as researchers rely on MEP amplitude to target the optimal scalp position. The primary motor cortex is here represented according to the mean coordinates of activity in hand-movement localizer task performed in the fMRI scanner (Papeo et al., 2012). Dots are positioned on a Talairach-normalized “Colin” template, according to the mean coordinates reported in the studies (see Table 1). Coordinates originally reported in Montreal Neurological Institute format, have been converted in Talairach format. Abbreviations: LIFG, left inferior frontal gyrus; ATL, anterior temporal lobe.
Figure 2In the top, the stimulation sites in Pulvermüller et al. ( The graphs show response times to arm words and leg words in five TMS conditions (TMS to arm-M1 and leg-M1 of the right and left hemisphere, and sham stimulation). We notice that response times to arm words remained quite unchanged across the three critical conditions (TMS to the left arm-site, to the left leg-site and sham stimulation). With permission from (Pulvermüller et al., 2005).