1. Semantic monitoring of words with emotional connotation during fMRI: contribution of anterior left frontal cortex
- Author
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Bruce Crosson, Joseph R. Sadek, Russell M. Bauer, Didem Gokcay, Samuel R. Browd, Ira Fischler, Edward J. Auerbach, M. Allison Cato, Leeza Maron, Richard W. Briggs, and Kaundinya S. Gopinath
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Emotions ,Prefrontal Cortex ,Functional Laterality ,Temporal lobe ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Image Processing, Computer-Assisted ,Reaction Time ,Semantic memory ,Humans ,Association (psychology) ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,General Neuroscience ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Semantics ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Clinical Psychology ,Emotional lateralization ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Frontal lobe ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Auditory Perception ,Imagination ,Female ,Neurology (clinical) ,Functional magnetic resonance imaging ,Psychology ,Connotation ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
Previous studies showed that cortex in the anterior portions of the left frontal and temporal lobes participates in generating words with emotional connotations and processing pictures with emotional content. If these cortices process the semantic attribute of emotional connotation, they should be active whenever processing emotional connotation, without respect to modality of input or mode of output. Thus, we hypothesized that they would activate during monitoring of words with emotional connotations. Sixteen normal subjects performed semantic monitoring of words with emotional connotations, animal names, and implement names during fMRI. Cortex in the anterior left frontal lobe demonstrated significant activity for monitoring words with emotional connotations compared to monitoring tone sequences, animal names, or implement names. Together, the current and previous results implicate cortex in the anterior left frontal lobe in semantic processing of emotional connotation, consistent with connections of this cortex to paralimbic association areas. Current findings also indicate that neural substrates for processing emotional connotation are independent of substrates for processing the categories of living and nonliving things.
- Published
- 2002