Jamali Mohsen, Grannan Benjamin, Cai Jing, Khanna Arjun R, Muñoz William, Caprara Irene, Paulk Angelique C, Cash Sydney S, Fedorenko Evelina, Williams Ziv M
Department of Neurosurgery, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Nature. 2024 Jul;631(8021):610-616. doi: 10.1038/s41586-024-07643-2. Epub 2024 Jul 3.
From sequences of speech sounds or letters, humans can extract rich and nuanced meaning through language. This capacity is essential for human communication. Yet, despite a growing understanding of the brain areas that support linguistic and semantic processing, the derivation of linguistic meaning in neural tissue at the cellular level and over the timescale of action potentials remains largely unknown. Here we recorded from single cells in the left language-dominant prefrontal cortex as participants listened to semantically diverse sentences and naturalistic stories. By tracking their activities during natural speech processing, we discover a fine-scale cortical representation of semantic information by individual neurons. These neurons responded selectively to specific word meanings and reliably distinguished words from nonwords. Moreover, rather than responding to the words as fixed memory representations, their activities were highly dynamic, reflecting the words' meanings based on their specific sentence contexts and independent of their phonetic form. Collectively, we show how these cell ensembles accurately predicted the broad semantic categories of the words as they were heard in real time during speech and how they tracked the sentences in which they appeared. We also show how they encoded the hierarchical structure of these meaning representations and how these representations mapped onto the cell population. Together, these findings reveal a finely detailed cortical organization of semantic representations at the neuron scale in humans and begin to illuminate the cellular-level processing of meaning during language comprehension.
通过语音或字母序列,人类能够借助语言提取丰富而细微的含义。这种能力对于人类交流至关重要。然而,尽管我们对支持语言和语义处理的脑区的理解不断加深,但在细胞水平以及动作电位的时间尺度上,神经组织中语言意义的推导在很大程度上仍然未知。在这里,当参与者聆听语义多样的句子和自然故事时,我们记录了左侧语言优势前额叶皮层中的单个细胞。通过追踪它们在自然语音处理过程中的活动,我们发现单个神经元对语义信息具有精细的皮层表征。这些神经元对特定的词义有选择性反应,并能可靠地区分单词和非单词。此外,它们的活动并非像固定的记忆表征那样对单词做出反应,而是高度动态的,根据单词所在的特定句子语境反映其含义,且与语音形式无关。总体而言,我们展示了这些细胞集合如何在语音实时聆听过程中准确预测单词的宽泛语义类别,以及它们如何追踪单词出现的句子。我们还展示了它们如何编码这些意义表征的层次结构,以及这些表征如何映射到细胞群体上。这些发现共同揭示了人类神经元尺度上语义表征的精细皮层组织,并开始阐明语言理解过程中意义的细胞水平处理机制。