1 / 24

Semantic memory and the brain: structure and processes A. Martin & L. L. Chao, 2001

Semantic memory and the brain: structure and processes A. Martin & L. L. Chao, 2001. Bart Vanheusden Manon Mulckhuyse. Semantic memory. Stored information: structure of semantic representations Processes: semantic working memory system. stored information.

damian
Télécharger la présentation

Semantic memory and the brain: structure and processes A. Martin & L. L. Chao, 2001

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Semantic memory and the brain: structure and processesA. Martin & L. L. Chao, 2001 Bart Vanheusden Manon Mulckhuyse

  2. Semantic memory • Stored information: structure of semantic representations • Processes: semantic working memory system

  3. stored information • Object concepts may be represented as distributed feature networks

  4. Features • form • motion • use-associated

  5. Networks based on form • Tasks: viewing, naming, matching pictures and answering written questions about object features of animal versus tool stimuli. • Animals: more activation lateral region of the fusiform gyrus • Tools: more activation medial fusiform gyrus.

  6. Activation animals versus tools

  7. Stored information and perception • Correspondence between patterns of activation for viewing and imagining • Information about object-specfic features may be stored within same neural systems that are active during perception of object form

  8. Networks based on motion • Task: viewing pictures and words • tools: more activation in left posterior middle temporal gyrus • animals: more activation in superior temporal sulcus • Anatomic near visual motion processing areas (MT)

  9. Animals versus tools

  10. Network based on use-associated • Tasks: naming, viewing or action word generation for tools versus animals, houses and faces • Tools: more activation left ventral premotor cortex • stored information or action- planning?

  11. Localisations of features in the brain

  12. Distributed activity However: activation is not limited to one region and is a complex pattern of peaks and valleys distributed over several cortical regions

  13. Representation of unique objects • Categorie: famous faces • activity in anterior middle temporal gyrus and temporal pole • anterior regions of the temporal lobe critical for retrieving information about unique entities

  14. Temporal lobe • possibility: temporal lobe object representation system is organised hierarchically, with increasing convergence and intergration of information occuring along its posterior tot anterior axis

  15. Hierarchically organisation in temporal lobe

  16. processes • Left inferior prefrontal cortex (LIPC) may serve as ‘semantic working memory system’ responsible for retrieving, maintaining, monitoring and manipulating semantic representations stored elsewhere

  17. Processes in LIPC • Task: making semantic versus non semantic judgements to words • semantic judgements: more activity in LIPC • Task: repeated performance on semantic versus non semantic tasks • repeated performance semantic tasks: decrease of activation in LIPC

  18. processes in LIPC • Task: judging same meaning of sentences determined by synonyms versus syntax • synonyms: more activation LIPC

  19. Semantic working memory system • Polar region of left temporal lobe may also contribute to the functioning of semantic working memory system

  20. Processes in left temporal cortex • Task: semantic association task normal subjects versus patients with semantic dementia • semantic dementia patients: normal activation in subregions of the left anterior temporal lobe, but no activation in ventral and lateral regions of the posterior left temporal cortex

  21. Semantic working memory system • Polar region of the left temporal lobe may provide top-down modularity input necessary for succesful retrieval of semantic representations stored in posterior regions

  22. Semantic memory working system

  23. Semantic memory: structure and processes • Future research: • precise role of the regions in objects semantics • influence by experience • nonfeature semantic object information and abstract concepts • networks underlying semantic working memory system

  24. Questions?

More Related