Literature DB >> 35232761

Minimal Phrase Composition Revealed by Intracranial Recordings.

Elliot Murphy1,2, Oscar Woolnough1,2, Patrick S Rollo1,2, Zachary J Roccaforte1, Katrien Segaert3,4, Peter Hagoort4,5, Nitin Tandon6,2,7.   

Abstract

The ability to comprehend phrases is an essential integrative property of the brain. Here, we evaluate the neural processes that enable the transition from single-word processing to a minimal compositional scheme. Previous research has reported conflicting timing effects of composition, and disagreement persists with respect to inferior frontal and posterior temporal contributions. To address these issues, 19 patients (10 male, 9 female) implanted with penetrating depth or surface subdural intracranial electrodes, heard auditory recordings of adjective-noun, pseudoword-noun, and adjective-pseudoword phrases and judged whether the phrase matched a picture. Stimulus-dependent alterations in broadband gamma activity, low-frequency power, and phase-locking values across the language-dominant left hemisphere were derived. This revealed a mosaic located on the lower bank of the posterior superior temporal sulcus (pSTS), in which closely neighboring cortical sites displayed exclusive sensitivity to either lexicality or phrase structure, but not both. Distinct timings were found for effects of phrase composition (210-300 ms) and pseudoword processing (∼300-700 ms), and these were localized to neighboring electrodes in pSTS. The pars triangularis and temporal pole encoded anticipation of composition in broadband low frequencies, and both regions exhibited greater functional connectivity with pSTS during phrase composition. Our results suggest that the pSTS is a highly specialized region composed of sparsely interwoven heterogeneous constituents that encodes both lower and higher level linguistic features. This hub in pSTS for minimal phrase processing may form the neural basis for the human-specific computational capacity for forming hierarchically organized linguistic structures.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Linguists have claimed that the integration of multiple words into a phrase demands a computational procedure distinct from single-word processing. Here, we provide intracranial recordings from a large patient cohort, with high spatiotemporal resolution, to track the cortical dynamics of phrase composition. Epileptic patients volunteered to participate in a task in which they listened to phrases (red boat), word-pseudoword or pseudoword-word pairs (e.g., red fulg). At the onset of the second word in phrases, greater broadband high gamma activity was found in posterior superior temporal sulcus in electrodes that exclusively indexed phrasal meaning and not lexical meaning. These results provide direct, high-resolution signatures of minimal phrase composition in humans, a potentially species-specific computational capacity.
Copyright © 2022 the authors.

Entities:  

Keywords:  auditory; human; language; phrase structure; semantics

Mesh:

Year:  2022        PMID: 35232761      PMCID: PMC8994536          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1575-21.2022

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.709


  3 in total

Review 1.  Intraoperative Brain Mapping in Multilingual Patients: What Do We Know and Where Are We Going?

Authors:  Jesús Martín-Fernández; Andreu Gabarrós; Alejandro Fernandez-Coello
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-04-27

2.  Integrity of the Left Arcuate Fasciculus Segments Significantly Affects Language Performance in Individuals with Acute/Subacute Post-Stroke Aphasia: A Cross-Sectional Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study.

Authors:  Qiwei Yu; Yan Sun; Xiaoyu Liao; Wenjun Qian; Tianfen Ye
Journal:  Brain Sci       Date:  2022-07-12

Review 3.  Clinical neuroscience and neurotechnology: An amazing symbiosis.

Authors:  Andrea Cometa; Antonio Falasconi; Marco Biasizzo; Jacopo Carpaneto; Andreas Horn; Alberto Mazzoni; Silvestro Micera
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2022-09-16
  3 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.