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Activation of Sensory-Motor Areas in Sentence Comprehension

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 468-478

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhp115

Keywords

simulation; conceptual organization; embodiment; semantic memory; sensory-motor theory; symbol grounding

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01 NS33576]
  2. NIH [R03 DC008416]
  3. NIH General Clinical Research Center [M01 RR00058]

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The sensory-motor account of conceptual processing suggests that modality-specific attributes play a central role in the organization of object and action knowledge in the brain. An opposing view emphasizes the abstract, amodal, and symbolic character of concepts, which are thought to be represented outside the brain's sensory-motor systems. We conducted a functional magnetic resonance imaging study in which the participants listened to sentences describing hand/arm action events, visual events, or abstract behaviors. In comparison to visual and abstract sentences, areas associated with planning and control of hand movements, motion perception, and vision were activated when understanding sentences describing actions. Sensory-motor areas were activated to a greater extent also for sentences with actions that relied mostly on hands, as opposed to arms. Visual sentences activated a small area in the secondary visual cortex, whereas abstract sentences activated superior temporal and inferior frontal regions. The results support the view that linguistic understanding of actions partly involves imagery or simulation of actions, and relies on some of the same neural substrate used for planning, performing, and perceiving actions.

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