4.4 Article

At the Edge of Semantic Space: The Breakdown of Coherent Concepts in Semantic Dementia Is Constrained by Typicality and Severity but Not Modality

Journal

JOURNAL OF COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 23, Issue 9, Pages 2240-2251

Publisher

MIT PRESS
DOI: 10.1162/jocn.2010.21582

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Overseas Research Student (ORS) Award
  2. University of Manchester
  3. MRC [G0501632]
  4. MRC [G0501632] Funding Source: UKRI
  5. Medical Research Council [G0501632] Funding Source: researchfish

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Hub-and-spoke models of semantic representation suggest that coherent concepts are formed from the integration of multiple, modality-specific information sources with additional modality-invariant representations-most likely stored in the ventrolateral anterior temporal lobe (vATL). As well as providing the necessary computational mechanisms for the complexities of feature integration, these modality-invariant representations also license a key aspect of semantic memory-semantic-based generalization. Semantic dementia allows us to investigate this aspect of conceptual knowledge because (a) the patients have a selective and progressive semantic degradation and (b) this is associated with profound ventrolateral ATL atrophy. Specifically, the boundaries between concepts become degraded in semantic dementia and, when tested using the appropriate materials, the patients make simultaneous under-and overgeneralization errors. We found that the rate of these errors were a function of typicality and psuedotypicality of the items as well as the severity of the patients' semantic impairment. Following the modality-invariant nature of the vATL hub representation, we also confirmed that the patients were impaired on both verbal-and picture-based versions of the same task.

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