Auditory context effects in picture naming investigated with event-related fMRI

被引:0
|
作者
Greig I. de Zubicaray
Katie L. McMahon
机构
[1] University of Queensland,Centre for Magnetic Resonance
关键词
Bold Signal; Picture Naming; Bold Response; Distractor Condition; Distractor Word;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Naming an object entails a number of processing stages, including retrieval of a target lexical concept and encoding of its phonological word form. We investigated these stages using the picture-word interference task in an fMRI experiment. Participants named target pictures in the presence of auditorily presented semantically related, phonologically related, or unrelated distractor words or in isolation. We observed BOLD signal changes in left-hemisphere regions associated with lexical-conceptual and phonological processing, including the midto-posterior lateral temporal cortex. However, these BOLD responses manifested as signal reductions for all distractor conditions relative to naming alone. Compared with unrelated words, phonologically related distractors showed further signal reductions, whereas only the pars orbitalis of the left inferior frontal cortex showed a selective reduction in response in the semantic condition. We interpret these findings as indicating that the word forms of lexical competitors are phonologically encoded and that competition during lexical selection is reduced by phonologically related distractors. Since the extended nature of auditory presentation requires a large portion of a word to be presented before its meaning is accessed, we attribute the BOLD signal reductions observed for semantically related and unrelated words to lateral inhibition mechanisms engaged after target name selection has occurred, as has been proposed in some production models.
引用
收藏
页码:260 / 269
页数:9
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Change detection in children with autism: An auditory event-related fMRI study
    Gomot, M
    Bernard, FA
    Davis, MH
    Belmonte, MK
    Ashwin, C
    Bullmore, ET
    Baron-Cohen, S
    NEUROIMAGE, 2006, 29 (02) : 475 - 484
  • [22] Event-related potentials and picture-word naming: Effects of attention and semantic relation for children and adults
    Greenham, SL
    Stelmack, RM
    DEVELOPMENTAL NEUROPSYCHOLOGY, 2001, 20 (03) : 619 - 638
  • [23] Neural processes associated with antisaccade task performance investigated with event-related fMRI
    Ford, KA
    Goltz, HC
    Brown, MRG
    Everling, S
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2005, 94 (01) : 429 - 440
  • [24] Event-related fMRI in cognition
    Huettel, Scott A.
    NEUROIMAGE, 2012, 62 (02) : 1152 - 1156
  • [25] Effects of perceptual context on event-related brain potentials during auditory spatial attention
    Arnott, SR
    Alain, C
    PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 2002, 39 (05) : 625 - 632
  • [26] EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS DURING NAMING
    STUSS, DT
    LEECH, EE
    SARAZIN, FF
    PICTON, TW
    ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, 1984, 425 (JUN) : 278 - 282
  • [27] Orthographic/phonological facilitation of naming responses in the picture-word task: An event-related fMRI study using overt vocal responding
    de Zubicaray, GI
    McMahon, KL
    Eastburn, MM
    Wilson, SJ
    NEUROIMAGE, 2002, 16 (04) : 1084 - 1093
  • [28] Overt naming in a picture-word interference task analysed with event-related potentials
    Schmitt, BM
    Bles, M
    Schiller, NO
    Muente, TF
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2002, : 80 - 80
  • [29] Tacit picture naming in developmental dyslexia:: Evidence from event-related brain potentials
    Rüsseler, J
    Wiesner, J
    Sambale, C
    Münte, TF
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 2005, : 93 - 93
  • [30] Improvement of auditory stimulation in event-related fMRI by insertion of silent intervals.
    Van de Moortele, PF
    Le Clec, G
    Hertz-Pannier, L
    Chiron, C
    Poline, JB
    Dehaene, S
    Le Bihan, D
    JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE, 1999, : 28 - 28