Neuroscience and Aphasia Research Unit (NARU), University of Manchester, Manchester, UK
Centre for Cognitive Ageing and Cognitive Epidemiology (CCACE), Department of Psychology, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci. 2018 Aug 5;373(1752). doi: 10.1098/rstb.2017.0136.
The anterior temporal lobes (ATLs) play a key role in conceptual knowledge representation. The hub-and-spoke theory suggests that the contribution of the ATLs to semantic representation is (a) transmodal, i.e. integrating information from multiple sensorimotor and verbal modalities, and (b) pan-categorical, representing concepts from all categories. Another literature, however, suggests that this region's responses are modality- and category-selective; prominent examples include category selectivity for socially relevant concepts and face recognition. The predictions of each approach have never been directly compared. We used data from three studies to compare category-selective responses within the ATLs. Study 1 compared ATL responses to famous people versus another conceptual category (landmarks) from visual versus auditory inputs. Study 2 compared ATL responses to famous people from pictorial and written word inputs. Study 3 compared ATL responses to a different kind of socially relevant stimuli, namely abstract non-person-related words, in order to ascertain whether ATL subregions are engaged for social concepts more generally or only for person-related knowledge. Across all three studies a dominant bilateral ventral ATL cluster responded to categories in modalities. Anterior to this 'pan-category' transmodal region, a second cluster responded more weakly overall yet selectively for people, but did so equally for spoken names and faces (Study 1). A third region in the anterior superior temporal gyrus responded selectively to abstract socially relevant words (Study 3), but did not respond to concrete socially relevant words (i.e. written names; Study 2). These findings can be accommodated by the graded hub-and-spoke model of concept representation. On this view, the ventral ATL is the centre point of a bilateral ATL hub, which contributes to conceptual representation through transmodal distillation of information arising from multiple modality-specific association cortices. Partial specialization occurs across the graded ATL hub as a consequence of gradedly differential connectivity across the region.This article is part of the theme issue 'Varieties of abstract concepts: development, use and representation in the brain'.
颞叶前部(ATLs)在概念知识表示中起着关键作用。中心辐射理论表明,ATLs 对语义表示的贡献是 (a) 跨模态的,即整合来自多个感觉运动和言语模态的信息,以及 (b) 泛类别,代表所有类别的概念。然而,另一种文献表明,该区域的反应是模态和类别选择性的;突出的例子包括与社会相关概念的类别选择性和面部识别。每种方法的预测从未被直接比较过。我们使用来自三项研究的数据来比较 ATLs 内的类别选择性反应。研究 1 比较了 ATL 对名人的反应与来自视觉和听觉输入的另一个概念类别(地标)的反应。研究 2 比较了来自图画和书面文字输入的名人的 ATL 反应。研究 3 比较了 ATL 对不同种类的与社会相关的刺激的反应,即抽象的非个人相关的词,以确定 ATL 亚区是否更普遍地参与社会概念,还是仅参与与个人相关的知识。在所有三项研究中,一个主导的双侧腹侧 ATL 簇对 个类别和 个模态作出反应。在这个“泛类别”跨模态区域之前,第二个簇总体上反应较弱,但对人有选择性,但对口语名称和面孔的反应是相等的(研究 1)。在额上颞叶回的第三个区域对抽象的与社会相关的词有选择性反应(研究 3),但对具体的与社会相关的词(即书面名称;研究 2)没有反应。这些发现可以被概念表示的分级中心辐射模型所包含。在这种观点中,腹侧 ATL 是双侧 ATL 中心的中心点,通过从多个模态特定的联合皮层中出现的信息的跨模态提炼,为概念表示做出贡献。由于该区域的连接程度逐渐不同,因此在分级 ATL 中心发生部分专业化。本文是主题问题“各种抽象概念:大脑中的发展、使用和表示”的一部分。