Literature DB >> 9579669

Cortical anatomy of mental imagery of concrete nouns based on their dictionary definition.

E Mellet1, N Tzourio, M Denis, B Mazoyer.   

Abstract

The functional anatomy of the interactions between spoken language and visual mental imagery was investigated with PET in eight normal volunteers during a series of three conditions: listening to concrete word definitions and generating their mental images (CONC), listening to abstract word definitions (ABST) and silent REST. The CONC task specifically elicited activations of the bilateral inferior temporal gyri, of the left premotor and left prefrontal regions, while activations in the bilateral superior temporal gyri were smaller than during the ABST task, during which an additional activation of the anterior part of the right middle temporal gyrus was observed. No activation of the occipital areas was observed during the CONC task when compared either to the REST or to the ABST task. The present study demonstrates that a network including part of the bilateral ventral stream and the frontal working memory areas is recruited when mental imagery of concrete words is performed on the basis of continuous spoken language.

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Mesh:

Year:  1998        PMID: 9579669     DOI: 10.1097/00001756-199803300-00007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroreport        ISSN: 0959-4965            Impact factor:   1.837


  35 in total

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3.  Neural dichotomy of word concreteness: a view from functional neuroimaging.

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4.  Spatiotemporal cortical dynamics underlying abstract and concrete word reading.

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5.  A brief thought can modulate activity in extrastriate visual areas: Top-down effects of refreshing just-seen visual stimuli.

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8.  Cognitive and neural foundations of religious belief.

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9.  Neural representation of abstract and concrete concepts: a meta-analysis of neuroimaging studies.

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10.  Abstract Conceptual Feature Ratings Predict Gaze Within Written Word Arrays: Evidence From a Visual Wor(l)d Paradigm.

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