Straube Benjamin, He Yifei, Steines Miriam, Gebhardt Helge, Kircher Tilo, Sammer Gebhard, Nagels Arne
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Philipps-University Marburg Marburg, Germany.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2013 Sep 13;7:120. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2013.00120. eCollection 2013.
ness and modality of interpersonal communication have a considerable impact on comprehension. They are relevant for determining thoughts and constituting internal models of the environment. Whereas concrete object-related information can be represented in mind irrespective of language, abstract concepts require a representation in speech. Consequently, modality-independent processing of abstract information can be expected. Here we investigated the neural correlates of abstractness (abstract vs. concrete) and modality (speech vs. gestures), to identify an abstractness-specific supramodal neural network. During fMRI data acquisition 20 participants were presented with videos of an actor either speaking sentences with an abstract-social [AS] or concrete-object-related content [CS], or performing meaningful abstract-social emblematic [AG] or concrete-object-related tool-use gestures [CG]. Gestures were accompanied by a foreign language to increase the comparability between conditions and to frame the communication context of the gesture videos. Participants performed a content judgment task referring to the person vs. object-relatedness of the utterances. The behavioral data suggest a comparable comprehension of contents communicated by speech or gesture. Furthermore, we found common neural processing for abstract information independent of modality (AS > CS ∩ AG > CG) in a left hemispheric network including the left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), temporal pole, and medial frontal cortex. Modality specific activations were found in bilateral occipital, parietal, and temporal as well as right inferior frontal brain regions for gesture (G > S) and in left anterior temporal regions and the left angular gyrus for the processing of speech semantics (S > G). These data support the idea that abstract concepts are represented in a supramodal manner. Consequently, gestures referring to abstract concepts are processed in a predominantly left hemispheric language related neural network.
人际交流的方式和模态对理解有相当大的影响。它们对于确定思想和构建环境的内部模型至关重要。具体的与物体相关的信息可以在不依赖语言的情况下在脑海中呈现,而抽象概念则需要通过言语来表达。因此,可以预期对抽象信息进行与模态无关的处理。在这里,我们研究了抽象性(抽象与具体)和模态(言语与手势)的神经关联,以识别一个特定于抽象性的超模态神经网络。在功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据采集期间,向20名参与者展示了一名演员的视频,该演员要么说出具有抽象社会[AS]或具体物体相关内容[CS]的句子,要么做出有意义的抽象社会象征性[AG]或具体物体相关的工具使用手势[CG]。手势配有外语,以提高不同条件之间的可比性,并构建手势视频的交流背景。参与者执行了一项内容判断任务,涉及言语中与人或物体相关的内容。行为数据表明,通过言语或手势传达的内容具有可比的理解度。此外,我们在包括左下额叶回(IFG)、颞极和内侧额叶皮质在内的左半球网络中发现了与模态无关的抽象信息的共同神经处理(AS > CS ∩ AG > CG)。在双侧枕叶、顶叶和颞叶以及右下额叶脑区发现了针对手势的模态特异性激活(G > S),在左前颞叶区域和左角回发现了用于处理言语语义的模态特异性激活(S > G)。这些数据支持了抽象概念以超模态方式表示的观点。因此,指称抽象概念的手势主要在左半球与语言相关的神经网络中进行处理。