Literature DB >> 23964920

Cognitive and physiological substrates of impaired sentence processing in Parkinson's disease.

M Grossman, S Carvell, S Gollomp, M B Stern, M Reivich, D Morrison, A Alavi, H I Hurtig.   

Abstract

Abstract Sentence comprehension is a complex process involving at least a grammatical processor and a procedural component that supports language computations. One type of cerebral architecture that may underlie sentence processing is a network of distributed brain regions. We report two experiments designed to evaluate the cognitive and physiological substrate of sentence processing diaculties in nondemented patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). In the first experiment, patients answered simple questions about sentences that varied in their computational demands. Group and individual patient analyses indicated that PD patients are significantly compromised on this task, and that their difficulties become more prominent as the computational demands of the sentences increase. We manipulated the set of sentences to stress performance aspects of sentence processing. PD patients were compromised in their ability to detect errors in the presence and nature of a sentence's grammatical morphemes, suggesting a deficit in selective attention, but their ability to answer questions about a sentence was not afFected by short-term memory factors. In the second experiment, positron emission tomography was used to correlate this pattern of sentence comprehension impairment with regional cerebral glucose metabolism (rCMRgl) obtained at rest in a representative subset of these PD patients. Grammatical comprehension and attention in sentence processing correlated significantly with mesial frontal rCMRgl. Regression analyses confirmed the central role of left mesial frontal cortex, and identified a subsidiary role for left caudate in overall sentence comprehension, for left dorsolateral frontal cortex in grammatical processing, and for bilateral dorsolateral frontal cortex in attending to the presence of grammatical features. We conclude that compromised mesial frontal functioning underlies in part the sentence processing deficit of these patients, and these data illustrate one method for mapping portions of a sentence processing mechanism onto a distributed cerebral architecture.

Entities:  

Year:  1993        PMID: 23964920     DOI: 10.1162/jocn.1993.5.4.480

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci        ISSN: 0898-929X            Impact factor:   3.225


  7 in total

Review 1.  The declarative/procedural model of lexicon and grammar.

Authors:  M T Ullman
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2001-01

2.  Linguistic correlates of asymmetric motor symptom severity in Parkinson's Disease.

Authors:  Thomas Holtgraves; Patrick McNamara; Kevin Cappaert; Raymond Durso
Journal:  Brain Cogn       Date:  2009-09-13       Impact factor: 2.310

3.  A dissociation between syntactic and lexical processing in Parkinson's disease.

Authors:  Karim Johari; Matthew Walenski; Jana Reifegerste; Farzad Ashrafi; Roozbeh Behroozmand; Mostafa Daemi; Michael T Ullman
Journal:  J Neurolinguistics       Date:  2019-04-01       Impact factor: 1.710

4.  Effect of Parkinson's disease on the production of structured and unstructured speaking tasks: respiratory physiologic and linguistic considerations.

Authors:  Jessica E Huber; Meghan Darling
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2010-09-15       Impact factor: 2.297

5.  Impact of typical aging and Parkinson's disease on the relationship among breath pausing, syntax, and punctuation.

Authors:  Jessica E Huber; Meghan Darling; Elaine J Francis; Dabao Zhang
Journal:  Am J Speech Lang Pathol       Date:  2012-07-30       Impact factor: 2.408

6.  Child first language and adult second language are both tied to general-purpose learning systems.

Authors:  Phillip Hamrick; Jarrad A G Lum; Michael T Ullman
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-01-29       Impact factor: 11.205

7.  Verbal monitoring in Parkinson's disease: A comparison between internal and external monitoring.

Authors:  Hanna S Gauvin; Jolien Mertens; Peter Mariën; Patrick Santens; Barbara A Pickut; Robert J Hartsuiker
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-23       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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