Hemispheric asymmetries in semantic processing: evidence from false memories for ambiguous words |
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Authors: | Faust Miriam Ben-Artzi Elisheva Harel Itay |
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Institution: | aCenter for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Pennsylvania, USA |
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Abstract: | We used fMRI to investigate competition during language production in two word production tasks: object naming and color naming of achromatic line drawings. Generally, fMRI activation was higher for color naming. The line drawings were followed by a word (the distractor word) that referred to either the object, a related object, or an unrelated object. The effect of the distractor word on the BOLD response was qualitatively different for the two tasks. The activation pattern suggests two different kinds of competition during lexical retrieval: (1) Task-relevant responses (e.g., red in color naming) compete with task-irrelevant responses (i.e., the object’s name). This competition effect was dominant in prefrontal cortex. (2) Multiple task-relevant responses (i.e., target word and distractor word) compete for selection. This competition effect was dominant in ventral temporal cortex. This study provides further evidence for the distinct roles of frontal and temporal cortex in language production, while highlighting the effects of competition, albeit from different sources, in both regions. |
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Keywords: | Language production Lexical retrieval Semantic relatedness fMRI |
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