Hoffman Paul
Neuroscience and Aphasia Research Unit (NARU), University of Manchester, UK.
Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology (CCACE), Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, UK.
J Neuropsychol. 2016 Sep;10(2):317-43. doi: 10.1111/jnp.12065. Epub 2015 Feb 23.
There are a number of long-standing theories on how the cognitive processing of abstract words, like 'life', differs from that of concrete words, like 'knife'. This review considers current perspectives on this debate, focusing particularly on insights obtained from patients with language disorders and integrating these with evidence from functional neuroimaging studies. The evidence supports three distinct and mutually compatible hypotheses. (1) Concrete and abstract words differ in their representational substrates, with concrete words depending particularly on sensory experiences and abstract words on linguistic, emotional, and magnitude-based information. Differential dependence on visual versus verbal experience is supported by the evidence for graded specialization in the anterior temporal lobes for concrete versus abstract words. In addition, concrete words have richer representations, in line with better processing of these words in most aphasic patients and, in particular, patients with semantic dementia. (2) Abstract words place greater demands on executive regulation processes because they have variable meanings that change with context. This theory explains abstract word impairments in patients with semantic-executive deficits and is supported by neuroimaging studies showing greater response to abstract words in inferior prefrontal cortex. (3) The relationships between concrete words are governed primarily by conceptual similarity, while those of abstract words depend on association to a greater degree. This theory, based primarily on interference and priming effects in aphasic patients, is the most recent to emerge and the least well understood. I present analyses indicating that patterns of lexical co-occurrence may be important in understanding these effects.
关于像“生命”这样的抽象词的认知加工与像“刀”这样的具体词的认知加工有何不同,存在一些长期以来的理论。本综述探讨了这场辩论的当前观点,特别关注从语言障碍患者身上获得的见解,并将这些见解与功能神经影像学研究的证据相结合。证据支持三个不同但相互兼容的假设。(1)具体词和抽象词在其表征基础上存在差异,具体词尤其依赖于感官体验,而抽象词则依赖于语言、情感和基于量级的信息。颞叶前部对具体词和抽象词的分级特化证据支持了对视觉与语言体验的不同依赖。此外,具体词具有更丰富的表征,这与大多数失语症患者,尤其是语义性痴呆患者对这些词的更好加工相一致。(2)抽象词对执行调节过程的要求更高,因为它们具有随语境变化的可变含义。该理论解释了语义执行缺陷患者的抽象词损伤,并得到神经影像学研究的支持,这些研究表明前额叶下部对抽象词的反应更大。(3)具体词之间的关系主要由概念相似性支配,而抽象词之间的关系在更大程度上取决于联想。该理论主要基于失语症患者的干扰和启动效应,是最近出现的且理解最少的理论。我提出的分析表明,词汇共现模式可能对理解这些效应很重要。