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Imagery in sentence comprehension: an fMRI study.

Just, Marcel Adam orcid logoORCID: 0000-0003-1245-3050, Newman, Sharlene D., Keller, Timothy A. orcid logoORCID: 0000-0002-2345-8626, McEleney, Alice orcid logoORCID: 0000-0003-4525-8147 and Carpenter, Patricia A. (2003) Imagery in sentence comprehension: an fMRI study. NeuroImage, 21 (1). pp. 112-124. ISSN 1053-8119

Abstract
This study examined brain activation while participants read or listened to high-imagery sentences like The number eight when rotated 90 degrees looks like a pair of spectacles or low-imagery sentences, and judged them as true or false. The sentence imagery manipulation affected the activation in regions (particularly, the intraparietal sulcus) that activate in other mental imagery tasks, such as mental rotation. Both the auditory and visual presentation experiments indicated activation of the intraparietal sulcus area in the high-imagery condition, suggesting a common neural substrate for language-evoked imagery that is independent of the input modality. In addition to exhibiting greater activation levels during the processing of high-imagery sentences, the left intraparietal sulcus also showed greater functional connectivity in this condition with other cortical regions, particularly language processing regions, regardless of the input modality. The comprehension of abstract, nonimaginal information in low-imagery sentences was accompanied by additional activation in regions in the left superior and middle temporal areas associated with the retrieval and processing of semantic and world knowledge. In addition to exhibiting greater activation levels during the processing of low-imagery sentences, this left temporal region also revealed greater functional connectivity in this condition with other left hemisphere language processing regions and with prefrontal regions, regardless of the input modality. The findings indicate that sentence comprehension can activate additional cortical regions that process information that is not specifically linguistic but varies with the information content of the sentence (such as visual or abstract information). In particular, the left intraparietal sulcus area appears to be centrally involved in processing the visual imagery that a sentence can evoke, while activating in synchrony with some core language processing regions.
Metadata
Item Type:Article (Published)
Refereed:Yes
Uncontrolled Keywords:Mental imagery; Sentence processing; fMRI
Subjects:Medical Sciences > Psychology
DCU Faculties and Centres:DCU Faculties and Schools > Faculty of Science and Health > School of Nursing, Psychotherapy & Community Health
Publisher:Elsevier
Official URL:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.08.042
Copyright Information:© 2003 Elsevier
Funders:Office of Naval Research Grant N00014-96-1-0322 (USA), National Institute of Mental Health Research Scientist Award MH-00662 (USA)
ID Code:28428
Deposited On:23 Jun 2023 14:41 by Vidatum Academic . Last Modified 23 Jun 2023 14:41
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