4.7 Article

Differential contributions of inferior frontal gyrus subregions to sentence processing guided by intonation

Journal

HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING
Volume 44, Issue 2, Pages 585-598

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/hbm.26086

Keywords

electric field simulations; prosody; semantics; sentence processing; syntax; TMS

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Auditory sentence comprehension involves processing semantics, syntax, and prosody. This study used transcranial magnetic stimulation to investigate the role of the left inferior frontal gyrus in semantic and syntactic processing. The results suggest that the anterior inferior frontal gyrus is crucial for semantic processing, while both the anterior and posterior inferior frontal gyri are involved in syntactic processing.
Auditory sentence comprehension involves processing content (semantics), grammar (syntax), and intonation (prosody). The left inferior frontal gyrus (IFG) is involved in sentence comprehension guided by these different cues, with neuroimaging studies preferentially locating syntactic and semantic processing in separate IFG subregions. However, this regional specialisation has not been confirmed with a neurostimulation method. Consequently, the causal role of such a specialisation remains unclear. This study probed the role of the posterior IFG (pIFG) for syntactic processing and the anterior IFG (aIFG) for semantic processing with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in a task that required the interpretation of the sentence's prosodic realisation. Healthy participants performed a sentence completion task with syntactic and semantic decisions, while receiving 10 Hz rTMS over either left aIFG, pIFG, or vertex (control). Initial behavioural analyses showed an inhibitory effect on accuracy without task-specificity. However, electric field simulations revealed differential effects for both subregions. In the aIFG, stronger stimulation led to slower semantic processing, with no effect of pIFG stimulation. In contrast, we found a facilitatory effect on syntactic processing in both aIFG and pIFG, where higher stimulation strength was related to faster responses. Our results provide first evidence for the functional relevance of left aIFG in semantic processing guided by intonation. The stimulation effect on syntactic responses emphasises the importance of the IFG for syntax processing, without supporting the hypothesis of a pIFG-specific involvement. Together, the results support the notion of functionally specialised IFG subregions for diverse but fundamental cues for language processing.

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