Grisoni Luigi, Dreyer Felix R, Pulvermüller Friedemann
Brain Language Laboratory, Department of Philosophy and Humanities, Freie Universtät Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany.
Brain Language Laboratory, Department of Philosophy and Humanities, Freie Universtät Berlin, 14195 Berlin, Germany Berlin School of Mind and Brain, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, 10099 Berlin, Germany.
Cereb Cortex. 2016 May;26(5):2353-66. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhw026. Epub 2016 Feb 22.
The recognition of action-related sounds and words activates motor regions, reflecting the semantic grounding of these symbols in action information; in addition, motor cortex exerts causal influences on sound perception and language comprehension. However, proponents of classic symbolic theories still dispute the role of modality-preferential systems such as the motor cortex in the semantic processing of meaningful stimuli. To clarify whether the motor system carries semantic processes, we investigated neurophysiological indexes of semantic relationships between action-related sounds and words. Event-related potentials revealed that action-related words produced significantly larger stimulus-evoked (Mismatch Negativity-like) and predictive brain responses (Readiness Potentials) when presented in body-part-incongruent sound contexts (e.g., "kiss" in footstep sound context; "kick" in whistle context) than in body-part-congruent contexts, a pattern reminiscent of neurophysiological correlates of semantic priming. Cortical generators of the semantic relatedness effect were localized in areas traditionally associated with semantic memory, including left inferior frontal cortex and temporal pole, and, crucially, in motor areas, where body-part congruency of action sound-word relationships was indexed by a somatotopic pattern of activation. As our results show neurophysiological manifestations of action-semantic priming in the motor cortex, they prove semantic processing in the motor system and thus in a modality-preferential system of the human brain.
对与动作相关的声音和词语的识别会激活运动区域,这反映出这些符号在动作信息中的语义基础;此外,运动皮层对声音感知和语言理解具有因果影响。然而,经典符号理论的支持者仍对诸如运动皮层等模态偏好系统在有意义刺激的语义处理中的作用存在争议。为了阐明运动系统是否参与语义处理过程,我们研究了与动作相关的声音和词语之间语义关系的神经生理学指标。事件相关电位显示,当与动作相关的词语出现在身体部位不一致的声音情境中(例如,脚步声情境中的“亲吻”;哨声情境中的“踢”)时,相比于身体部位一致的情境,会产生显著更大的刺激诱发(类失配负波)和预测性脑反应(准备电位),这种模式让人联想到语义启动的神经生理学关联。语义相关性效应的皮层发生器定位于传统上与语义记忆相关的区域,包括左下额叶皮层和颞极,关键的是,还定位于运动区域,在运动区域中,动作声音 - 词语关系的身体部位一致性通过激活的躯体定位模式来表征。由于我们的结果显示了运动皮层中动作 - 语义启动的神经生理学表现,它们证明了运动系统中的语义处理,进而证明了人类大脑模态偏好系统中的语义处理。