University of Queensland, Language Neuroscience Laboratory, Centre for Clinical Research, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
BMC Neurosci. 2012 Aug 10;13:98. doi: 10.1186/1471-2202-13-98.
Previous attempts to investigate the effects of semantic tasks on picture naming in both healthy controls and people with aphasia have typically been confounded by inclusion of the phonological word form of the target item. As a result, it is difficult to isolate any facilitatory effects of a semantically-focused task to either lexical-semantic or phonological processing. This functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) study examined the neurological mechanisms underlying short-term (within minutes) and long-term (within days) facilitation of naming from a semantic task that did not include the phonological word form, in both participants with aphasia and age-matched controls.
Behavioral results showed that a semantic task that did not include the phonological word form can successfully facilitate subsequent picture naming in both healthy controls and individuals with aphasia. The whole brain neuroimaging results for control participants identified a repetition enhancement effect in the short-term, with modulation of activity found in regions that have not traditionally been associated with semantic processing, such as the right lingual gyrus (extending to the precuneus) and the left inferior occipital gyrus (extending to the fusiform gyrus). In contrast, the participants with aphasia showed significant differences in activation over both the short- and the long-term for facilitated items, predominantly within either left hemisphere regions linked to semantic processing or their right hemisphere homologues.
For control participants in this study, the short-lived facilitation effects of a prior semantic task that did not include the phonological word form were primarily driven by object priming and episodic memory mechanisms. However, facilitation effects appeared to engage a predominantly semantic network in participants with aphasia over both the short- and the long-term. The findings of the present study also suggest that right hemisphere involvement may be supportive rather than maladaptive, and that a large distributed perisylvian network in both cerebral hemispheres supports the facilitation of naming in individuals with aphasia.
先前尝试调查语义任务对健康对照组和失语症患者图片命名的影响时,通常会因纳入目标项目的语音词形而产生混淆。因此,很难将语义任务的任何促进作用孤立于词汇语义或语音处理。这项功能性磁共振成像 (fMRI) 研究检查了在不包括语音词形的情况下,语义任务对短期(几分钟内)和长期(几天内)命名的促进作用的神经机制,研究对象包括失语症患者和年龄匹配的对照组。
行为结果表明,不包括语音词形的语义任务可以成功地促进健康对照组和失语症患者随后的图片命名。对照组的全脑神经影像学结果在短期内发现了重复增强效应,活动调节发生在传统上与语义处理无关的区域,如右侧舌回(延伸至楔前叶)和左侧枕下回(延伸至梭状回)。相比之下,失语症患者在短期和长期内对促进项目的激活都有显著差异,主要是在与语义处理相关的左侧半球区域或其右侧半球同源物内。
在本研究中,对于对照组参与者,不包括语音词形的先前语义任务的短暂促进作用主要由物体启动和情景记忆机制驱动。然而,在短期和长期内,促进作用似乎在失语症患者中主要涉及语义网络。本研究的结果还表明,右侧半球的参与可能是支持性的而不是适应不良的,并且两个大脑半球中的一个大的周围大脑皮层网络支持失语症患者的命名促进。