Graves William W, Grabowski Thomas J, Mehta Sonya, Gordon Jean K
University of Iowa, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2007 Apr;19(4):617-31. doi: 10.1162/jocn.2007.19.4.617.
Cognitive models of word production correlate the word frequency effect (i.e., the fact that words which appear with less frequency take longer to produce) with an increased processing cost to activate the whole-word (lexical) phonological representation. We performed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) while subjects produced overt naming responses to photographs of animals and manipulable objects that had high name agreement but were of varying frequency, with the purpose of identifying neural structures participating specifically in activating whole-word phonological representations, as opposed to activating lexical semantic representations or articulatory-motor routines. Blood oxygen level-dependent responses were analyzed using a parametric approach based on the frequency with which each word produced appears in the language. Parallel analyses were performed for concept familiarity and word length, which provided indices of semantic and articulatory loads. These analyses permitted us to identify regions related to word frequency alone, and therefore, likely to be related specifically to activation of phonological word forms. We hypothesized that the increased processing cost of producing lower-frequency words would correlate with activation of the left posterior inferotemporal (IT) cortex, the left posterior superior temporal gyrus (pSTG), and the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG). Scan-time response latencies demonstrated the expected word frequency effect. Analysis of the fMRI data revealed that activity in the pSTG was modulated by frequency but not word length or concept familiarity. In contrast, parts of IT and IFG demonstrated conjoint frequency and familiarity effects, and parts of both primary motor regions demonstrated conjoint effects of frequency and word length. The results are consistent with a model of word production in which lexical-semantic and lexical-phonological information are accessed by overlapping neural systems within posterior and anterior language-related cortices, with pSTG specifically involved in accessing lexical phonology.
词汇生成的认知模型将词汇频率效应(即出现频率较低的词汇生成所需时间更长这一事实)与激活整个单词(词汇)语音表征的加工成本增加联系起来。我们进行了功能磁共振成像(fMRI),让受试者对具有高命名一致性但频率不同的动物和可操作物体的照片做出公开命名反应,目的是识别专门参与激活整个单词语音表征的神经结构,而非激活词汇语义表征或发音运动程序。使用基于每个生成的单词在语言中出现频率的参数方法分析血氧水平依赖反应。对概念熟悉度和单词长度进行了平行分析,它们提供了语义和发音负荷的指标。这些分析使我们能够识别仅与单词频率相关的区域,因此可能专门与语音单词形式的激活相关。我们假设生成低频单词增加的加工成本将与左后颞下(IT)皮质、左后颞上回(pSTG)和左额下回(IFG)的激活相关。扫描时间反应潜伏期显示出预期的单词频率效应。对fMRI数据的分析表明,pSTG中的活动受频率调节,但不受单词长度或概念熟悉度调节。相比之下,IT和IFG的部分区域表现出频率和熟悉度的联合效应,两个主要运动区域的部分区域表现出频率和单词长度的联合效应。结果与词汇生成模型一致,在该模型中,词汇语义和词汇语音信息通过后语言相关皮质和前语言相关皮质内重叠的神经系统进行访问,pSTG专门参与访问词汇语音。