Literature DB >> 24956224

Word classes in the brain: implications of linguistic typology for cognitive neuroscience.

David Kemmerer1.   

Abstract

Although recent research on the neural substrates of word classes has generated some valuable findings, significant progress has been hindered by insufficient attention to theoretical issues involving the nature of the lexical phenomena under investigation. This paper shows how insights from linguistic typology can provide cognitive neuroscientists with well-motivated guidelines for interpreting the extant data and charting a future course. At the outset, a fundamental distinction is made between universal and language-particular aspects of word classes. Regarding universals, prototypical nouns involve reference to objects, and their meanings rely primarily on the ventral temporal lobes, which represent the shape features of entities; in contrast, prototypical verbs involve predication of actions, and their meanings rely primarily on posterior middle temporal regions and frontoparietal regions, which represent the visual motion features and somatomotor features of events. Some researchers maintain that focusing on object nouns and action verbs is inappropriate because it conflates the semantic and grammatical properties of each word class. However, this criticism not only ignores the importance of the universal prototypes, but also mistakenly assumes that there are straightforward morphological and/or syntactic criteria for identifying nouns and verbs in particular languages. In fact, at the level of individual languages, the classic method of distributional analysis leads to a proliferation of constructionally based entity-denoting and event-denoting word classes with mismatching memberships, and all of this variation must be taken seriously, not only by linguists, but also by cognitive neuroscientists. Many of these word classes involve remarkably close correspondences between grammar and meaning and hence are highly relevant to the neurobiology of conceptual knowledge, but so far hardly any of them have been investigated from a neurolinguistic perspective.
Copyright © 2014 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Grammatical categories; Lexical semantics; Neurolinguistics; Nouns; Verbs

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 24956224     DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2014.05.004

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cortex        ISSN: 0010-9452            Impact factor:   4.027


  12 in total

1.  Language-invariant verb processing regions in Spanish-English bilinguals.

Authors:  Joanna L Willms; Kevin A Shapiro; Marius V Peelen; Petra E Pajtas; Albert Costa; Lauren R Moo; Alfonso Caramazza
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2011-04-16       Impact factor: 6.556

2.  Comparing nouns and verbs in a lexical task.

Authors:  Françoise Cordier; Jean-Claude Croizet; François Rigalleau
Journal:  J Psycholinguist Res       Date:  2013-02

3.  Recently learned foreign abstract and concrete nouns are represented in distinct cortical networks similar to the native language.

Authors:  Katja M Mayer; Manuela Macedonia; Katharina von Kriegstein
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2017-06-05       Impact factor: 5.038

4.  Neural representation of word categories is distinct in the temporal lobe: An activation likelihood analysis.

Authors:  Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah; Rajani Sebastian; Ashlyn Vander Woude
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2018-08-18       Impact factor: 5.038

5.  Hearing and orally mimicking different acoustic-semantic categories of natural sound engage distinct left hemisphere cortical regions.

Authors:  James W Lewis; Magenta J Silberman; Jeremy J Donai; Chris A Frum; Julie A Brefczynski-Lewis
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2018-06-29       Impact factor: 2.381

6.  Separate neural systems support representations for actions and objects during narrative speech in post-stroke aphasia.

Authors:  Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht; Julius Fridriksson; Chris Rorden; Travis Nesland; Rutvik Desai; Leonardo Bonilha
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2015-12-01       Impact factor: 4.881

7.  Grammatical Class Effects Across Impaired Child and Adult Populations.

Authors:  Maria Kambanaros; Kleanthes K Grohmann
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2015-11-17

8.  Nouns, verbs, objects, actions, and abstractions: local fMRI activity indexes semantics, not lexical categories.

Authors:  Rachel L Moseley; Friedemann Pulvermüller
Journal:  Brain Lang       Date:  2014-04-12       Impact factor: 2.381

9.  Nouns slow down speech across structurally and culturally diverse languages.

Authors:  Frank Seifart; Jan Strunk; Swintha Danielsen; Iren Hartmann; Brigitte Pakendorf; Søren Wichmann; Alena Witzlack-Makarevich; Nivja H de Jong; Balthasar Bickel
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-05-14       Impact factor: 11.205

10.  Noun and verb processing in aphasia: Behavioural profiles and neural correlates.

Authors:  Reem S W Alyahya; Ajay D Halai; Paul Conroy; Matthew A Lambon Ralph
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2018-01-31       Impact factor: 4.881

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