Department of Neurology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Neurology. 2011 Apr 19;76(16):1428-34. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3182166e2c.
Our current understanding of the neural basis of semantic memory is informed primarily by studies of concrete objects. However, conceptual knowledge encompasses many other, albeit less concrete, domains. This article reviews evidence from neuroimaging and patient studies that speaks to the neural basis of action concepts and the words that refer to them. These data highlight 2 important principles governing the neural instantiation of semantic knowledge. First, the organization of conceptual representations in the brain parallels perception and action. Action concepts are at least partially represented within modality-specific areas responsible for the perception and execution of dynamic actions. Second, unimodal sensory and motor cortices act as "points of entry" for more abstract action knowledge. Increasingly abstract conceptual knowledge derived from these modalities is represented in brain areas located anterior and centripetal to modality-specific regions. Extending research on the neural basis of semantics to include dynamic and relational aspects of the world gives us a more complete appreciation of the range of cognitive and communication impairments that may be experienced by patients with neurologic disease.
我们目前对语义记忆的神经基础的理解主要是通过对具体物体的研究得出的。然而,概念知识还包括许多其他的、尽管不太具体的领域。本文综述了神经影像学和患者研究的证据,这些证据涉及到动作概念及其所指的词语的神经基础。这些数据突出了支配语义知识的神经实现的两个重要原则。首先,大脑中概念表征的组织与感知和动作平行。动作概念至少部分地存在于负责感知和执行动态动作的特定于模态的区域内。其次,单模态感觉和运动皮质充当更抽象的动作知识的“切入点”。源自这些模态的越来越抽象的概念知识,在位于特定于模态的区域的前侧和向心区域的大脑区域中得到表示。将语义的神经基础研究扩展到包括世界的动态和关系方面,可以让我们更全面地了解神经疾病患者可能经历的认知和沟通障碍的范围。