The words that little by little revealed everything: Neural response to lexical-semantic content during narrative comprehension

被引:2
|
作者
Thye, Melissa [1 ]
Hoffman, Paul [1 ]
Mirman, Daniel [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Edinburgh, Sch Philosophy Psychol & Language Sci, Edinburgh EH8 9JZ, Scotland
基金
英国生物技术与生命科学研究理事会;
关键词
Semantic cognition; Narrative comprehension; Naturalistic neuroimaging; Social cognition; ANTERIOR TEMPORAL CORTEX; FUNCTIONAL SPECIALIZATION; LANGUAGE COMPREHENSION; AMBIGUITY RESOLUTION; EMOTIONAL VALENCE; SOCIAL CONCEPTS; BRAIN ACTIVITY; FMRI; AROUSAL; NORMS;
D O I
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2023.120204
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
The ease with which narratives are understood belies the complexity of the information being conveyed and the cognitive processes that support comprehension. The meanings of the words must be rapidly accessed and integrated with the reader's mental representation of the overarching, unfolding scenario. A broad, bilateral brain network is engaged by this process, but it is not clear how words that vary on specific semantic dimensions, such as ambiguity, emotion, or socialness, engage the semantic, semantic control, or social cognition systems. In the present study, data from 48 participants who listened to The Little Prince audiobook during MRI scanning were selected from the Le Petit Prince dataset. The lexical and semantic content within the narrative was quantified from the transcript words with factor scores capturing Word Length, Semantic Flexibility, Emotional Strength, and Social Impact. These scores, along with word quantity variables, were used to investigate where these predictors co-vary with activation across the brain. In contrast to studies of isolated word processing, large networks were found to co-vary with the lexical and semantic content within the narrative. An increase in semantic content engaged the ventral portion of ventrolateral ATL, consistent with its role as a semantic hub. Decreased semantic content engaged temporal pole and inferior parietal lobule, which may reflect semantic integration. The semantic control network was engaged by words with low Semantic Flexibility, perhaps due to the demand required to process infrequent, less semantically diverse language. Activation in ATL co-varied with an increase in Social Impact, which is consistent with the claim that social knowledge is housed within the neural architecture of the semantic system. These results suggest that current models of language processing may present an impoverished estimate of the neural systems that coordinate to support narrative comprehension, and, by extension, real-world language processing.
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页数:19
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