| Literature DB >> 34785757 |
Simone Viganò1, Valerio Rubino2, Marco Buiatti2, Manuela Piazza2.
Abstract
When humans mentally "navigate" bidimensional uniform conceptual spaces, they recruit the same grid-like and distance codes typically evoked when exploring the physical environment. Here, using fMRI, we show evidence that conceptual navigation also elicits another kind of spatial code: that of absolute direction. This code is mostly localized in the medial parietal cortex, where its strength predicts participants' comparative semantic judgments. It may provide a complementary mechanism for conceptual navigation outside the hippocampal formation.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34785757 PMCID: PMC8595308 DOI: 10.1038/s42003-021-02806-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Commun Biol ISSN: 2399-3642
Fig. 1Experimental design.
a Example of an audiovisual object, producing a sound during a squeezing animation. b Nine audiovisual objects, resulting from the unique combination of size and sound, are labelled with abstract names that participants learn during the course of a behavioural training. c In our bidimensional conceptual space, there are 16 possible directions between two words. d Examples of trials during the comparison task. For each trial, two words are presented in rapid sequence, and participants are instructed to think about how both the perceptual features implied by the object names changed. This was conceivable as a linear trajectory in the bidimensional conceptual space.
Fig. 2Results.
a We modelled the sequence of trials presented during each run taking into account, for each direction implied by a word pair, the elapsed time from the last presentation of the same direction in the conceptual space (see ‘Methods’). b Brain regions showing adaptation to the direction of movement in the conceptual space during the semantic comparison task, after removing brain regions responding to confounding factors (see ‘Methods’ and Supplementary Fig. 1A). Results are thresholded at p < 0.005, FDR-corrected at cluster level with q < 0.05. Group-level effects are plotted onto an average of subjects’ structural images. Precu = precuneus; RSC = retrosplenial cortex; Lin = lingual gyrus; mSFG = medial superior frontal gyrus; FG = fusiform gyrus; Visual = visual cortex. c Correlation between performance during the semantic comparison task and the adaptation effect in the precuneus (r = 0.59) and in the retrosplenial cortex (r = 0.34).