Prat Chantel S, Keller Timothy A, Just Marcel Adam
Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213-3890, USA.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2007 Dec;19(12):1950-63. doi: 10.1162/jocn.2007.19.12.1950.
Language comprehension is neurally underpinned by a network of collaborating cortical processing centers; individual differences in comprehension must be related to some set of this network's properties. This study investigated the neural bases of individual differences during sentence comprehension by examining the network's response to two variations in processing demands: reading sentences containing words of high versus low lexical frequency and having simpler versus more complex syntax. In a functional magnetic resonance imaging study, readers who were independently identified as having high or low working memory capacity for language exhibited three differentiating properties of their language network, namely, neural efficiency, adaptability, and synchronization. First, greater efficiency (defined as a reduction in activation associated with improved performance) was manifested as less activation in the bilateral middle frontal and right lingual gyri in high-capacity readers. Second, increased adaptability was indexed by larger lexical frequency effects in high-capacity readers across bilateral middle frontal, bilateral inferior occipital, and right temporal regions. Third, greater synchronization was observed in high-capacity readers between left temporal and left inferior frontal, left parietal, and right occipital regions. Synchronization interacted with adaptability, such that functional connectivity remained constant or increased with increasing lexical and syntactic demands in high-capacity readers, whereas low-capacity readers either showed no reliable differentiation or a decrease in functional connectivity with increasing demands. These results are among the first to relate multiple cortical network properties to individual differences in reading capacity and suggest a more general framework for understanding the relation between neural function and individual differences in cognitive performance.
语言理解在神经层面上由一个协作的皮质处理中心网络支撑;理解能力的个体差异必定与该网络的某些属性相关。本研究通过考察该网络对两种处理需求变化的反应,来探究句子理解过程中个体差异的神经基础:阅读包含高词汇频率与低词汇频率单词的句子,以及具有简单句法与复杂句法的句子。在一项功能磁共振成像研究中,被独立认定为具有高或低语言工作记忆容量的读者,其语言网络表现出三种不同特性,即神经效率、适应性和同步性。首先,更高的效率(定义为与表现改善相关的激活减少)表现为高容量读者双侧额中回和右侧舌回的激活较少。其次,高容量读者在双侧额中回、双侧枕下回和右侧颞区的词汇频率效应更大,这表明适应性增强。第三,在高容量读者的左侧颞叶与左侧额下回、左侧顶叶和右侧枕叶区域之间观察到更强的同步性。同步性与适应性相互作用,因此在高容量读者中,随着词汇和句法需求的增加,功能连接保持不变或增加,而低容量读者要么没有表现出可靠的差异,要么随着需求增加功能连接减少。这些结果首次将多个皮质网络属性与阅读能力的个体差异联系起来,并为理解神经功能与认知表现个体差异之间的关系提出了一个更通用的框架。