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The different neural correlates of action and functional knowledge in semantic memory: An fMRI study

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 740-751

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhm110

Keywords

anterior inferotemporal cortex; conceptual knowledge; functional semantic features; inferior parietal lobule; manipulative semantic features

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Previous reports suggest that the internal organization of semantic memory is in terms of different types of knowledge, including sensory (information about perceptual features), action (motor-based knowledge of object utilization), and functional (abstract properties, as function and context of use). Consistent with this view, a specific loss of action knowledge, with preserved functional knowledge, has been recently observed in patients with left frontoparietal lesions. The opposite pattern (impaired functional knowledge with preserved action knowledge) was reported in association with anterior inferotemporal lesions. In the present study, the cerebral representation of action and functional knowledge was investigated using event-related analysis of functional magnetic resonance imaging data. Fifteen subjects were presented with pictures showing pairs of manipulable objects and asked whether the objects within each pair were used with the same manipulation pattern (action knowledge condition) or in the same context (functional knowledge condition). Direct comparisons showed action knowledge, relative to functional knowledge, to activate a left frontoparietal network, comprising the intraparietal sulcus, the inferior parietal lobule, and the dorsal premotor cortex. The reverse comparison yielded activations in the retrosplenial and the lateral anterior inferotemporal cortex. These results confirm and extend previous neuropsychological data and support the hypothesis of the existence of different types of information processing in the internal organization of semantic memory.

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