Differential Influence of Ventromedial Prefrontal Cortex Lesions on Neural Representations of Schema and Semantic Category Knowledge

Author:

Giuliano Ariana E.12,Bonasia Kyra1,Ghosh Vanessa E.1,Moscovitch Morris12,Gilboa Asaf12

Affiliation:

1. Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Health Sciences, Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. University of Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Prior knowledge, such as schemas or semantic categories, influences our interpretation of stimulus information. For this to transpire, prior knowledge must first be reinstated and then instantiated by being applied to incoming stimuli. Previous neuropsychological models implicate the ventromedial prefrontal cortex (vMPFC) in mediating these functions for schemas and the anterior/lateral temporal lobes and related structures for categories. vMPFC, however, may also affect processing of semantic category information. Here, the putative differential role of the vMPFC in the reinstatement and instantiation of schemas and semantic categories was examined by probing network-level oscillatory dynamics. Patients with vMPFC damage (n = 11) and healthy controls (n = 13) were instructed to classify words according to a given schema or category, while electroencephalography was recorded. As reinstatement is a preparatory process, we focused on oscillations occurring 500 msec prior to stimulus presentation. As instantiation occurs at stimulus presentation, we focused on oscillations occurring between stimulus presentation and 1000 msec poststimulus. We found that reinstatement was associated with prestimulus, theta and alpha desynchrony between vMPFC and the posterior parietal cortex for schemas, and between lateral temporal lobe and inferotemporal cortex for categories. Damage to the vMPFC influenced both schemas and categories, but patients with damage to the subcallosal vMPFC showed schema-specific deficits. Instantiation showed similar oscillatory patterns in the poststimulus time frame, but in the alpha and beta frequency bands. Taken together, these findings highlight distinct but partially overlapping neural mechanisms implicated in schema- and category-mediated processing.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Publisher

MIT Press - Journals

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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