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Close yet independent: Dissociation of social from valence and abstract semantic dimensions in the left anterior temporal lobe.

Authors :
Wang, Xiaosha
Wang, Bijun
Bi, Yanchao
Source :
Human Brain Mapping. Nov2019, Vol. 40 Issue 16, p4759-4776. 18p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The anterior temporal lobe (ATL) is engaged in various types of semantic dimensions. One consistently reported dimension is social information, with abstract words describing social behaviors inducing stronger activations in the ATL than nonsocial words. One potential factor that has been systematically confounded in this finding is emotional valence, given that abstract social words tend to be associated with emotional feelings. We investigated which factors drove the ATL sensitivity using a 2 (social/nonsocial) × 2 (valenced/neutral) factorial design in an fMRI study with relatively high spatial resolutions. We found that sociality and valence were processed in different ATL regions without significant interactions: The social effect was found in the left anterior superior temporal sulcus (aSTS), whereas the valence effect activated small clusters in the bilateral temporal poles (TP). In the left ATL, the social‐ and valence‐related clusters were distinct from another superior ATL area that exhibited a general "abstractness" effect with little modulation of sociality or valence. These subregions exhibited distinct whole‐brain functional connectivity patterns during the resting state, with the social cluster functionally connected to the default mode network, the valence cluster connected to the adjacent temporal regions and amygdala, and the abstractness cluster connected to a distributed network including a set of language‐related regions. These results of activation profiles and connectivity patterns together indicate that the way in which the left ATL supports semantic processing is highly fine‐grained, with the neural substrate for social semantic effects dissociated from those for emotional valence and abstractness. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10659471
Volume :
40
Issue :
16
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Human Brain Mapping
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
139014970
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.24735