Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6023623 NeuroImage 2016 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Focused on brain mechanisms of sentence comprehension in context•Contrasted easy to detect and more subtle semantic anomalies•Found new evidence for hierarchical processing along a dorsal-ventral axis•Results point to the role of bilateral supramarginal gyrus in the processing of complex stimuli.•Found response profile in prefrontal areas aligned with degree of uncertainty in decision-making processes

Human language allows us to express our thoughts and ideas by combining entities, concepts and actions into multi-event episodes. Yet, the functional neuroanatomy engaged in interpretation of such high-level linguistic input remains poorly understood. Here, we used easy to detect and more subtle “borderline” anomalies to investigate the brain regions and mechanistic principles involved in the use of real-world event knowledge in language comprehension. Overall, the results showed that the processing of sentences in context engages a complex set of bilateral brain regions in the frontal, temporal and inferior parietal lobes. Easy anomalies preferentially engaged lower-order cortical areas adjacent to the primary auditory cortex. In addition, the left supramarginal gyrus and anterior temporal sulcus as well as the right posterior middle temporal gyrus contributed to the processing of easy and borderline anomalies. The observed pattern of results is explained in terms of (i) hierarchical processing along a dorsal-ventral axis and (ii) the assumption of high-order association areas serving as cortical hubs in the convergence of information in a distributed network. Finally, the observed modulation of BOLD signal in prefrontal areas provides support for their role in the implementation of executive control processes.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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