UPV-EHU ADDI
  • Back
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • Login
  • English 
    • English
    • español
    • Basque
  • FAQ
View Item 
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
  •   ADDI
  • INVESTIGACIÓN
  • Grupos de Investigación, Institutos y Centros Colaboradores
  • BCBL
  • BCBL-Publications
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Disentangling meaning in the brain: Left temporal involvement in agreement processing

Thumbnail
View/Open
Disentangling meaning2017.pdf (1.305Mb)
Date
2017
Author
Mancini, Simona
Quiñones, Ileana
Molinaro, Nicola
Hernandez-Cabrera, Juan A.
Carreiras, Manuel
Metadata
Show full item record
  Estadisticas en RECOLECTA
(LA Referencia)

Simona Mancini, Ileana Quiñones, Nicola Molinaro, Juan A. Hernandez-Cabrera, Manuel Carreiras, Disentangling meaning in the brain: Left temporal involvement in agreement processing, In Cortex, Volume 86, 2017, Pages 140-155, ISSN 0010-9452, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2016.11.008.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10810/23651
Abstract
Sentence comprehension is successfully accomplished by means of a form-to-meaning mapping procedure that relies on the extraction of morphosyntactic information from the input and its mapping to higher-level semantic–discourse representations. In this study, we sought to determine whether neuroanatomically distinct brain regions are involved in the processing of different types of information contained in the propositional meaning of a sentence, namely person and number. While person information indexes the role that an individual has in discourse (i.e., the speaker, the addressee or the entity being talked about by speaker and addressee), number indicates its cardinality (i.e., a single entity vs a multitude of entities). An event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment was run using agreement-Correct and Person- and Number-violated sentences in Spanish, to disentangle the processing mechanisms and neural substrates associated with the building of discourse and cardinality representations. The contrast between Person and Number Violations showed qualitative and quantitative differences. A greater response for person compared to number was found in the left middle temporal gyrus (LMTG). However, critically, a posterior-to-anterior functional gradient emerged within this region. While the posterior portion of the LMTG was sensitive to both Person and Number Violations, the anterior portion of this region showed selective response for Person Violations. These results confirm that the comprehension of the propositional meaning of a sentence results from a composite, feature-sensitive mechanism of form-to-meaning mapping in which the nodes of the language network are differentially involved.
Collections
  • BCBL-Publications

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka
 

 

Browse

All of ADDICommunities & CollectionsBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)SubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesDepartamentos (cas.)Departamentos (eus.)Subjects

My Account

Login

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

DSpace 6.4 software copyright © -2023  DuraSpace
OpenAIRE
EHU Bilbioteka