Saygin Ayşe Pinar, Wilson Stephen M, Dronkers Nina F, Bates Elizabeth
Department of Cognitive Science, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive 0515, La Jolla, CA 92093-0515, USA.
Neuropsychologia. 2004;42(13):1788-804. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2004.04.016.
We tested aphasic patients' comprehension of actions to examine processing deficits in the linguistic and non-linguistic domains and their lesion correlates. Twenty-nine left-hemisphere injured patients and 18 age-matched control subjects matched pictured actions (with the objects missing) or their linguistic equivalents (printed sentences with the object missing) to one of two visually-presented pictures of objects. Aphasic patients performed poorly not only in the linguistic domain but also in the non-linguistic domain. A subset of the patients, largely consisting of severe and non-fluent aphasics, showed a greater deficit in the linguistic domain compared with the non-linguistic domain and across the patient group, deficits in the linguistic and non-linguistic domains were not tightly correlated. Poor performance in pantomime interpretation was associated with lesions in the inferior frontal, premotor and motor cortex, a portion of somatosensory cortex, and the caudate, while poor reading comprehension of actions was associated with lesions around the anterior superior temporal lobe, the anterior insula and the anterior portion of the inferior parietal lobe. Lesion size did not correlate with deficits. The lesion results for pantomime interpretation deficits demonstrate that lesions in the frontal component of the human analog of the "mirror neuron system" are associated with deficits in non-linguistic action understanding. For reading comprehension deficits, the lesion correlates are brain areas known to be involved in linguistic tasks including sentence processing and speech articulation; the parietal lesion site may also correspond to a subpart of the human mirror neuron system. These results indicate that brain areas important for the production of language and action are also recruited in their comprehension. Similar findings have been reported in electrophysiological and neuroimaging studies. Our findings now also lend neuropsychological support to an embodied view of brain organization for action processing.
我们测试了失语症患者对动作的理解能力,以检查语言和非语言领域的加工缺陷及其病灶相关性。29名左侧半球受损患者和18名年龄匹配的对照受试者将有动作的图片(缺少物体)或其语言对应形式(缺少物体的印刷句子)与两张视觉呈现的物体图片之一进行匹配。失语症患者不仅在语言领域表现不佳,在非语言领域也表现不佳。部分患者,主要是重度非流畅性失语症患者,与非语言领域相比,在语言领域表现出更大的缺陷,并且在整个患者组中,语言和非语言领域的缺陷并没有紧密相关。哑剧解释能力差与额下回、运动前区和运动皮层、部分体感皮层以及尾状核的病变有关,而对动作的阅读理解能力差与颞上叶前部、岛叶前部和顶下叶前部周围的病变有关。病灶大小与缺陷无关。哑剧解释缺陷的病灶结果表明,人类“镜像神经元系统”类似物的额叶部分的病变与非语言动作理解缺陷有关。对于阅读理解缺陷,病灶相关性是已知参与包括句子处理和言语表达在内的语言任务的脑区;顶叶病灶部位也可能对应于人类镜像神经元系统的一个子部分。这些结果表明,对语言和动作产生很重要的脑区在其理解过程中也会被激活。在电生理和神经影像学研究中也报告了类似的发现。我们的发现现在也为动作处理的具身化脑组织结构观点提供了神经心理学支持。