Lu Lisa H, Crosson Bruce, Nadeau Stephen E, Heilman Kenneth M, Gonzalez-Rothi Leslie J, Raymer Anastasia, Gilmore Robin L, Bauer Russell M, Roper Steven N
Department of Psychology, Chung Yuan Christian University, Chung-Li, Taiwan, TOC.
Neuropsychologia. 2002;40(9):1608-21. doi: 10.1016/s0028-3932(02)00014-3.
Research on category-specific naming deficits and on noun and verb naming has raised questions about how organization of knowledge in the brain impacts word retrieval. The semantic attribute hypothesis posits that lexical access is mediated by brain systems that process the most definitive attributes of specific concepts. For example, it has been suggested that the most definitive attribute of living things is their visual form, whereas the most definitive attribute of non-living things is their function. The competing grammatical role hypothesis posits that access to a word depends on the grammatical role it plays in a sentence. Since nouns and verbs have different roles, it is assumed that the brain uses different systems to process them. These two hypotheses were tested in experimental subjects who had undergone left anterior temporal lobectomy (LATL) or right anterior temporal lobectomy (RATL) by assessing confrontation naming of living things, tools/implements, non-human actions, and human actions. The names of living things and implements are nouns and the names of actions are verbs. Within each grammatical class, items were characterized either predominantly by visual attributes (living things and non-human actions) or by attributes related to human activity (implements and human actions). Our results support the semantic attribute hypothesis. Patients with LATL were worse at naming tools/implements and human actions than RATL patients. Dysfunction in or removal of the left anterior temporal lobe disrupts fronto-temporal connections from the uncinate fasciculus. These connections may mediate activation of action-related information (i.e. movement plan and/or motor use) that facilitates the retrieval of names for tools/implements and human actions.
对特定类别命名缺陷以及名词和动词命名的研究,引发了关于大脑中知识组织如何影响词汇检索的问题。语义属性假说认为,词汇通达是由处理特定概念最具决定性属性的脑系统介导的。例如,有人提出生物最具决定性的属性是它们的视觉形式,而非生物最具决定性的属性是它们的功能。与之竞争的语法角色假说认为,对一个单词的通达取决于它在句子中所起的语法作用。由于名词和动词具有不同的作用,因此假定大脑使用不同的系统来处理它们。通过评估对生物、工具/器具、非人类动作和人类动作的指物命名,在接受了左前颞叶切除术(LATL)或右前颞叶切除术(RATL)的实验对象中对这两种假说进行了检验。生物和器具的名称是名词,动作的名称是动词。在每个语法类别中,项目主要由视觉属性(生物和非人类动作)或与人类活动相关的属性(器具和人类动作)来表征。我们的结果支持语义属性假说。LATL患者在命名工具/器具和人类动作方面比RATL患者更差。左前颞叶的功能障碍或切除会破坏来自钩束的额颞连接。这些连接可能介导动作相关信息(即运动计划和/或运动用途)的激活,从而促进工具/器具和人类动作名称的检索。