| Literature DB >> 24065897 |
Arne Nagels1, Christina Kauschke, Judith Schrauf, Carin Whitney, Benjamin Straube, Tilo Kircher.
Abstract
Many figurative expressions are fully conventionalized in everyday speech. Regarding the neural basis of figurative language processing, research has predominantly focused on metaphoric expressions in minimal semantic context. It remains unclear in how far metaphoric expressions during continuous text comprehension activate similar neural networks as isolated metaphors. We therefore investigated the processing of similes (figurative language, e.g., "He smokes like a chimney!") occurring in a short story. Sixteen healthy, male, native German speakers listened to similes that came about naturally in a short story, while blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) responses were measured with functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). For the event-related analysis, similes were contrasted with non-figurative control sentences (CS). The stimuli differed with respect to figurativeness, while they were matched for frequency of words, number of syllables, plausibility, and comprehensibility. Similes contrasted with CS resulted in enhanced BOLD responses in the left inferior (IFG) and adjacent middle frontal gyrus. Concrete CS as compared to similes activated the bilateral middle temporal gyri as well as the right precuneus and the left middle frontal gyrus (LMFG). Activation of the left IFG for similes in a short story is consistent with results on single sentence metaphor processing. The findings strengthen the importance of the left inferior frontal region in the processing of abstract figurative speech during continuous, ecologically-valid speech comprehension; the processing of concrete semantic contents goes along with a down-regulation of bilateral temporal regions.Entities:
Keywords: abstractness; fMRI; figurative speech; inferior frontal gyrus; simile
Year: 2013 PMID: 24065897 PMCID: PMC3776934 DOI: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00121
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Behav Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5153 Impact factor: 3.558
Figure 1Top: Imaging results for the contrast Simile > CS. The bar graph illustrates the contrast estimates (beta values; yellow bar = Simile, blue bar = CS). Bottom: Imaging results for the interaction of brain responses with both familiar and abstract similes.
Peak activation within clusters for the contrasts Simile > CS, CS > Simile as well as for the correlation analysis with familiarity and abstractness (whole-brain analysis, Monte Carlo corr. .
| L | Inferior frontal gyrus (p. Triangularis) | 45 | −48 | 32 | 24 | 4.93 | 17 |
| −48 | 44 | 20 | 4.56 | ||||
| R | Precuneus | 7 | 4 | −60 | 32 | 6.20 | 184 |
| 0 | −60 | 16 | 5.80 | ||||
| 0 | −44 | 36 | 4.85 | ||||
| R | Middle temporal gyrus | 20 | 52 | −4 | −24 | 6.12 | 44 |
| 60 | −12 | −20 | 4.42 | ||||
| L | Middle temporal gyrus | 39 | −56 | −64 | 20 | 5.97 | 77 |
| −44 | −60 | 24 | 5.54 | ||||
| −56 | −68 | 32 | 5.12 | ||||
| L | Middle frontal gyrus | 6 | −32 | 20 | 56 | 5.18 | 17 |
| L | Middle temporal gyrus | 20 | −60 | −12 | −24 | 4.72 | 28 |
| −48 | −16 | −20 | 4.48 | ||||
| R | Middle temporal gyrus | 39 | 60 | −64 | 12 | 4.69 | 102 |
| 60 | −60 | 24 | 4.64 | ||||
| 52 | −68 | 28 | 4.64 | ||||
| L | Parahippocampal gyrus | 30 | −8 | −40 | 0 | 4.50 | 25 |
| L | Anterior cingulate | 24 | −4 | 24 | 28 | 4.87 | 42 |
| −8 | 16 | 36 | 4.47 | ||||
| 0 | 8 | 44 | 3.46 | ||||
| R | Superior frontal gyrus | 6 | 12 | 4 | 72 | 4.01 | 14 |
Coordinates refer to MNI space.