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Brain Activation During Conceptual Processing of Action and Sound Verbs.

Authors :
Popp, Margot
Trumpp, Natalie M.
Sim, Eun-Jin
Kiefer, Markus
Source :
Advances in Cognitive Psychology. Dec2019, Vol. 15 Issue 4, p236-255. 20p.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Grounded cognition approaches to conceptual representations postulate a close link between conceptual knowledge and the sensorimotor brain systems. The present fMRI study tested, whether a feature-specific representation of concepts, as previously demonstrated for nouns, can also be found for action- and sound-related verbs. Participants were presented with action- and soundrelated verbs along with pseudoverbs while performing a lexical decision task. Sound-related verbs activated auditory areas in the temporal cortex, whereas action-related verbs activated brain regions in the superior frontal gyrus and the cerebellum, albeit only at a more liberal threshold. This differential brain activation during conceptual verb processing partially overlapped with or was adjacent to brain regions activated during the functional localizers probing sound perception or action execution. Activity in brain areas involved in the processing of action information was parametrically modulated by ratings of action relevance. Comparisons of action- and sound-related verbs with pseudoverbs revealed activation for both verb categories in auditory and motor areas. In contrast to proposals of strong grounded cognition approaches, our study did not demonstrate a considerable overlap of activations for action- and sound-related verbs and for the corresponding functional localizer tasks. However, in line with weaker variants of grounded cognition theories, the differential activation pattern for action- and sound-related verbs was near corresponding sensorimotor brain regions depending on conceptual feature relevance. Possibly, action-sound coupling resulted in a mutual activation of the motor and the auditory system for both action- and sound-related verbs, thereby reducing the effect sizes for the differential contrasts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18951171
Volume :
15
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Advances in Cognitive Psychology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
140967505
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5709/acp-0272-4