Memory and Aging Center, University of California San Francisco, 675 Nelson Rising Ln, Suite 190, USA.
Memory and Aging Center, University of California San Francisco, 675 Nelson Rising Ln, Suite 190, USA.
Cortex. 2023 Apr;161:26-37. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2022.12.015. Epub 2023 Feb 8.
Attaching semantic meaning to sensory information received from both inside and outside our bodies is a fundamental function of the human brain. The theory of Controlled Semantic Cognition (CSC) proposes that the formation of semantic knowledge relies on connections between spatially distributed modality-specific spoke-nodes, and a modality-general hub in the anterior temporal lobes (ATLs). This theory can also be applied to social semantic knowledge, though certain domain-specific spoke-nodes may make a disproportionate contribution to the understanding of social concepts. The ATLs have strong connections with spoke-node structures such as the subgenual ACC (sgACC) and the orbitofrontal cortex (OFC) that play an important role in predicting the hedonic value of stimuli. We hypothesized that in addition to the ATL semantic hub, a social semantic task would also require input from hedonic evaluation structures. We used voxel based morphometry (VBM) to examine structural brain-behavior relationships in 152 patients with neurodegeneration (Alzheimer's disease [N = 12], corticobasal syndrome (N = 18], progressive supranuclear palsy [N = 13], behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia [N = 56], and primary progressive aphasia (PPA) [N = 53]) using the Social Interaction Vocabulary Task (SIVT). This task measures the ability to correctly match a social term (e.g. "gossiping") with a visual depiction of that social interaction. As predicted, VBM showed that worse SIVT scores corresponded with volume loss in bilateral ATL semantic hub regions, but also in the sgACC, OFC, caudate and putamen (pFWE <0.05). These results support the CSC model of a hub-and-spoke organization of social semantic knowledge with the ATL as a domain-general semantic hub, and ventromedial and striatal structures as domain specific spoke-nodes. Importantly, these results suggest that correct comprehension of social semantic concepts requires emotional 'tagging' of a concept by the evaluation system, and that the social deficits observed in some neurodegenerative disease syndromes may be caused by the break-down of this mechanism.
将来自我们身体内外的感觉信息赋予语义意义是人类大脑的基本功能。受控语义认知(CSC)理论提出,语义知识的形成依赖于空间分布的模态特异性辐辏节点与前颞叶(ATL)中的模态一般性中枢之间的连接。该理论也可应用于社会语义知识,尽管某些特定于领域的辐辏节点可能对社会概念的理解做出不成比例的贡献。ATL 与内侧前扣带皮层(sgACC)和眶额皮层(OFC)等辐辏节点结构具有很强的连接,这些结构在预测刺激的愉悦值方面起着重要作用。我们假设,除了 ATL 语义中枢之外,社会语义任务还需要来自愉悦评估结构的输入。我们使用基于体素的形态测量学(VBM)检查了 152 名神经退行性疾病患者(阿尔茨海默病[N=12],皮质基底节综合征[N=18],进行性核上性麻痹[N=13],行为变异额颞叶痴呆[N=56]和原发性进行性失语症[N=53])的大脑-行为结构关系,使用社会互动词汇任务(SIVT)。该任务衡量正确匹配社交术语(例如“闲聊”)与社交互动的视觉描述的能力。正如预测的那样,VBM 显示,SIVT 得分越差与双侧 ATL 语义中枢区域的体积损失相关,但也与 sgACC、OFC、尾状核和壳核相关(pFWE<0.05)。这些结果支持社会语义知识的中枢辐辏组织的 CSC 模型,其中 ATL 作为一般语义中枢,腹侧和纹状体结构作为特定于领域的辐辏节点。重要的是,这些结果表明,正确理解社会语义概念需要评估系统对概念进行情感“标记”,而一些神经退行性疾病综合征中观察到的社会缺陷可能是由于该机制的破坏所致。