| Literature DB >> 27458393 |
Allison E Britt1, Casey Ferrara2, Daniel Mirman3.
Abstract
Producing a word requires selecting among a set of similar alternatives. When many semantically related items become activated, the difficulty of the selection process is increased. Experiment 1 tested naming of items with either multiple synonymous labels ("Alternate Names," e.g., gift/present) or closely semantically related but non-equivalent responses ("Near Semantic Neighbors," e.g., jam/jelly). Picture naming was fastest and most accurate for pictures with only one label ("High Name Agreement"), slower and less accurate in the Alternate Names condition, and slowest and least accurate in the Near Semantic Neighbors condition. These results suggest that selection mechanisms in picture naming operate at two distinct levels of processing: selecting between similar but non-equivalent names requires two selection processes (semantic and lexical), whereas selecting among equivalent names only requires one selection at the lexical level. Experiment 2 examined how these selection mechanisms are affected by normal aging and found that older adults had significantly more difficulty in the Near Semantic Neighbors condition, but not in the Alternate Names condition. This suggests that aging affects semantic processing and selection more strongly than it affects lexical selection. Experiment 3 examined the role of the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG) in these selection processes by testing individuals with aphasia secondary to stroke lesions that either affected the LIFG or spared it. Surprisingly, there was no interaction between condition and lesion group: the presence of LIFG damage was not associated with substantively worse naming performance for pictures with multiple acceptable labels. These results are not consistent with a simple view of LIFG as the locus of lexical selection and suggest a more nuanced view of the neural basis of lexical and semantic selection.Entities:
Keywords: aging; aphasia; left prefrontal cortex; lexical access; picture naming; semantics; word selection
Year: 2016 PMID: 27458393 PMCID: PMC4937813 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2016.00813
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Mean characteristics of critical stimuli (SD in parentheses).
| High Name Agreement | Alternate Names | Near Semantic Neighbors | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Number of pictures | 34 | 17 | 17 |
| Name agreement | 100% (0%) | 65.6% (9.3%) | 57.1% (15.6%) |
| h-index | – | 1.01 (0.28) | 1.03 (0.44) |
| Synonymy | – | 0.71 (0.23) | 0.18 (0.14) |
| Number of labels selected during norming | – | 2.16 (0.35) | 1.80 (0.50) |
| Number of labels accepted as correct for scoring purposes | 1.0 (0) | 2.41 (0.62) | 2.47 (0.80) |
| Length | 5.21 (1.37) | 5.51 (1.48) | 5.45 (1.25) |
| Word frequency | 15.18 (19.33) | 20.20 (28.38) | 12.66 (15.86) |
| Objective visual complexity | 6.37 (1.62) | 6.89 (2.35) | 6.73 (2.51) |
Descriptions and examples of response categories used for accuracy coding.
| Error category | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Correct | Appropriate label for picture provided by at least two individuals in previous norming study; or any additional response judged to be accurate based on consensus judgment of the experimenters | For one picture: “jam” and “jelly” both considered correct (responses from norming study); also accepted additional response “preserves” |
| Phonological – Non-word | A non-word response that shares the initial phoneme and/or at least 50% of phonemes with the target word | “Thack” for “tack” |
| Phonological – Formal | A semantically unrelated real-word response that shares the initial phoneme and/or at least 50% of phonemes with the target word | “Tram” for “pram (carriage)” |
| Semantic | A semantically related response. All counted as errors in Alternate Names condition; only more distantly related responses not occurring in the norming name agreement study counted as errors in the Near Semantic Neighbors Condition | Alternate Names condition: “turkey” for “chicken” |
| Mixed | A semantically related response that shares the initial phoneme and/or at least 50% of phonemes with the target word (same condition differences described for semantic errors apply) | Alternate Names condition: “can opener” for “corkscrew” |
| Superordinate | Overarching category name of the target word | “Instrument” for “tuba” |
| Other | Semantically and phonologically unrelated responses or descriptions of the target word | “Marble” for “olives;” “something from under the sea” for “jellyfish” |
| No response | An indication of uncertainty about identity of picture with no response provided | “I don’t know what that is” |
Comparisons of condition differences in naming latency.
| Condition comparison | Correct response trials | All response trials | Refined subset |
|---|---|---|---|
| High Name Agreement vs. Alternate Names | 330 (74)∗∗∗ | 366 (89)∗∗∗ | 309 (56)∗∗∗ |
| High Name Agreement vs. Near Semantic Neighbors | 642 (82)∗∗∗ | 720 (96)∗∗∗ | 581 (70)∗∗∗ |
| Alternate Names vs. Near Semantic Neighbors | 313 (88)∗∗ | 354 (104)∗∗ | 272 (77)∗∗ |
Demographic, neuropsychological, and neurological characteristics of participants with aphasia (Experiment 3).
| LIFG % Damage | |||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Participant | Lesion group | Gender | Age | MPO | WAB AQ | CCT | PNT | Lesion volume (cc) | Pars orbitalis | Pars triangularis | Pars opercularis | Anterior ROI | Posterior ROI |
| MR0083 | Anterior | M | 54 | 175 | 95.1 | 91 | 92.6 | 51 | 0% | 0% | 12% | 16% | 1% |
| MR0253 | Anterior | M | 69 | 258 | 86.6 | 89 | 74.9 | 138 | 53% | 60% | 88% | 24% | 4% |
| MR0419 | Anterior | F | 46 | 149 | 91.5 | 77 | 91.4 | 52 | 16% | 57% | 90% | 14% | 0% |
| MR1857 | Anterior | F | 77 | 79 | 90.2 | 80 | 81.7 | 18 | 20% | 39% | 0% | 6% | 0% |
| MR2289 | Anterior | F | 75 | 59 | 73.2 | 58 | 76.6 | 62 | 0% | 36% | 81% | 13% | 0% |
| MR2350 | Anterior | M | 51 | 71 | 83.2 | 77 | 85.1 | 61 | 16% | 54% | 98% | 14% | 0% |
| MR1088 | Posterior | F | 52 | 112 | 88.3 | 66 | 76.6 | 89 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 24% |
| MR1743 | Posterior | M | 56 | 81 | 99.3 | 84 | 87.4 | 52 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 9% |
| MR2180 | Posterior | M | 71 | 63 | 41.4 | 72 | 25.1 | 67 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 22% |
| MR2221 | Posterior | F | 36 | 63 | 78.7 | 81 | 93.1 | 64 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 23% |
| MR2378 | Posterior | F | 57 | 48 | 96.0 | 80 | 79.4 | 91 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 18% |
| MR2464 | Posterior | M | 65 | 39 | 84.7 | 78 | 82.9 | 61 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 20% |
| MR2667 | Posterior | F | 64 | 12 | 91.7 | 75 | 82.3 | 34 | 0% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 10% |