Stowe L A, Broere C A, Paans A M, Wijers A A, Mulder G, Vaalburg W, Zwarts F
Department of Linguistics, Graduate School for Behavioral and Cognitive Neurosciences, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Neuroreport. 1998 Sep 14;9(13):2995-9. doi: 10.1097/00001756-199809140-00014.
Three areas of the left hemisphere play different roles in sentence comprehension. An area of posterior middle and superior temporal gyrus shows activation correlated with the structural complexity of a sentence, suggesting that this area supports processing of sentence structure. The lateral anterior temporal gyrus is more activated bilaterally by all sentence conditions than by word lists; thus the function of the area probably does not directly support processing of structure but rather processing of words specific to a sentence context. Left inferior frontal cortex also shows activation related to sentence complexity but is also more activated in word list processing than in simple sentences; this region may thus support a form of verbal working memory which maintains sentence structural information as well as lexical items.