Mollo Giovanna, Cornelissen Piers L, Millman Rebecca E, Ellis Andrew W, Jefferies Elizabeth
Department of Psychology, University of York, York, United Kingdom.
Department of Psychology, School of Life Sciences, Northumbria University, Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2017 Jan 11;12(1):e0169269. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0169269. eCollection 2017.
The "hub and spoke model" of semantic representation suggests that the multimodal features of objects are drawn together by an anterior temporal lobe (ATL) "hub", while modality-specific "spokes" capture perceptual/action features. However, relatively little is known about how these components are recruited through time to support object identification. We used magnetoencephalography to measure neural oscillations within left ATL, lateral fusiform cortex (FC) and central sulcus (CS) during word-picture matching at different levels of specificity (employing superordinate vs. specific labels) for different categories (manmade vs. animal). This allowed us to determine (i) when each site was sensitive to semantic category and (ii) whether this was modulated by task demands. In ATL, there were two phases of response: from around 100 ms post-stimulus there were phasic bursts of low gamma activity resulting in reductions in oscillatory power, relative to a baseline period, that were modulated by both category and specificity; this was followed by more sustained power decreases across frequency bands from 250 ms onwards. In the spokes, initial power increases were not stronger for specific identification, while later power decreases were stronger for specific-level identification in FC for animals and in CS for manmade objects (from around 150 ms and 200 ms, respectively). These data are inconsistent with a temporal sequence in which early sensory-motor activity is followed by later retrieval in ATL. Instead, knowledge emerges from the rapid recruitment of both hub and spokes, with early specificity and category effects in the ATL hub. The balance between these components depends on semantic category and task, with visual cortex playing a greater role in the fine-grained identification of animals and motor cortex contributing to the identification of tools.
语义表征的“中心-辐条模型”表明,物体的多模态特征由颞叶前部(ATL)“中心”整合在一起,而特定模态的“辐条”捕捉感知/动作特征。然而,对于这些组件如何随着时间被调用以支持物体识别,我们知之甚少。我们使用脑磁图来测量在不同特异性水平(使用上位词与特定标签)对不同类别(人造物与动物)进行单词-图片匹配时,左侧ATL、外侧梭状回(FC)和中央沟(CS)内的神经振荡。这使我们能够确定:(i)每个部位何时对语义类别敏感;(ii)这是否受到任务需求的调节。在ATL中,有两个反应阶段:刺激后约100毫秒开始,有低伽马活动的相位性爆发,导致振荡功率相对于基线期降低,这受到类别和特异性的调节;随后从250毫秒起,各频段的功率持续下降。在辐条区域,对于特定识别,最初的功率增加并不更强,而后来的功率下降在FC中对于动物的特定水平识别以及在CS中对于人造物体的特定水平识别更强(分别从约150毫秒和200毫秒开始)。这些数据与早期感觉运动活动之后接着是ATL中后期检索的时间顺序不一致。相反,知识源于中心和辐条的快速调用,在ATL中心有早期特异性和类别效应。这些组件之间的平衡取决于语义类别和任务,视觉皮层在动物的精细识别中发挥更大作用,而运动皮层有助于工具的识别。