Literature DB >> 30753925

Left perirhinal cortex codes for semantic similarity between written words defined from cued word association.

Antonietta Gabriella Liuzzi1, Patrick Dupont1, Ronald Peeters2, Rose Bruffaerts3, Simon De Deyne4, Gert Storms4, Rik Vandenberghe5.   

Abstract

Knowledge of visual and nonvisual attributes of concrete entities is distributed over neocortical uni- and polymodal association cortex. Here we investigated the role of left perirhinal cortex in explicit knowledge retrieval from written words. We examined whether it extended across visual and nonvisual properties, animate and inanimate entities, how this differed from picture input and how specific it was for perirhinal cortex compared to surrounding structures. The semantic similarity between stimuli was determined on the basis of a word association-based model. Eighteen participants participated in this event-related fMRI experiment. During property verification, the left perirhinal cortex coded for the similarity in meaning between written words. No differences were found between visual and nonvisual properties or between animate and inanimate entities. Among the surrounding regions, a semantic similarity effect for written words was also present in the left parahippocampal gyrus, but not in the hippocampus nor in the right perirhinal cortex. Univariate analysis revealed higher activity for visual property verification in visual processing regions and for nonvisual property verification in an extended system encompassing the superior temporal sulcus along its anterior-posterior axis, the inferior and the superior frontal gyrus. The association strength between the concept and the property correlated positively with fMRI response amplitude in visual processing regions, and negatively with response amplitude in left inferior and superior frontal gyrus. The current findings establish that input-modality determines the semantic similarity effect in left perirhinal cortex more than the content of the knowledge retrieved or the semantic control demand do. We propose that left perirhinal cortex codes for the association between a concrete written word and the object it refers to and operates as a connector hub linking written word input to the distributed cortical representation of word meaning.
Copyright © 2019 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2019        PMID: 30753925     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.02.011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroimage        ISSN: 1053-8119            Impact factor:   6.556


  4 in total

1.  Inferior parietal lobule is sensitive to different semantic similarity relations for concrete and abstract words.

Authors:  Maria Montefinese; Paola Pinti; Ettore Ambrosini; Ilias Tachtsidis; David Vinson
Journal:  Psychophysiology       Date:  2020-12-19       Impact factor: 4.348

2.  A category-selective semantic memory deficit for animate objects in semantic variant primary progressive aphasia.

Authors:  Shalom K Henderson; Sheena I Dev; Rania Ezzo; Megan Quimby; Bonnie Wong; Michael Brickhouse; Daisy Hochberg; Alexandra Touroutoglou; Bradford C Dickerson; Claire Cordella; Jessica A Collins
Journal:  Brain Commun       Date:  2021-09-14

3.  Posterior Intraparietal Sulcus Mediates Detection of Salient Stimuli Outside the Endogenous Focus of Attention.

Authors:  Tarik Jamoulle; Qian Ran; Karen Meersmans; Jolien Schaeverbeke; Patrick Dupont; Rik Vandenberghe
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2022-03-30       Impact factor: 5.357

4.  Representations of conceptual information during automatic and active semantic access.

Authors:  Antonietta Gabriella Liuzzi; Silvia Ubaldi; Scott Laurence Fairhall
Journal:  Neuropsychologia       Date:  2021-07-09       Impact factor: 3.054

  4 in total

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