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Parkinson’s disease disrupts both automatic and controlled processing of action verbs
Authors:Leonardo Fernandino  Lisa L. ConantJeffrey R. Binder  Karen BlindauerBradley Hiner  Katie SpanglerRutvik H. Desai
Affiliation:Department of Neurology, Medical College of Wisconsin, United States
Abstract:The problem of how word meaning is processed in the brain has been a topic of intense investigation in cognitive neuroscience. While considerable correlational evidence exists for the involvement of sensory-motor systems in conceptual processing, it is still unclear whether they play a causal role. We investigated this issue by comparing the performance of patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) with that of age-matched controls when processing action and abstract verbs. To examine the effects of task demands, we used tasks in which semantic demands were either implicit (lexical decision and priming) or explicit (semantic similarity judgment). In both tasks, PD patients’ performance was selectively impaired for action verbs (relative to controls), indicating that the motor system plays a more central role in the processing of action verbs than in the processing of abstract verbs. These results argue for a causal role of sensory-motor systems in semantic processing.
Keywords:Conceptual processing   Embodiment   Language comprehension   Lexical semantics   Parkinson&rsquo  s disease   Priming
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