Orienting to Different Dimensions of Word Meaning Alters the Representation of Word Meaning in Early Processing Regions

Author:

Meersmans Karen1ORCID,Storms Gerrit2,De Deyne Simon3,Bruffaerts Rose1,Dupont Patrick1,Vandenberghe Rik14

Affiliation:

1. Laboratory for Cognitive Neurology, Department of Neurosciences, Leuven Brain Institute, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

2. Laboratory of Experimental Psychology, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

3. Computational Cognitive Science Lab, Melbourne School of Psychological Sciences, University of Melbourne, 3010 Melbourne, Australia

4. Neurology Department, University Hospitals Leuven, 3000 Leuven, Belgium

Abstract

Abstract Conscious processing of word meaning can be guided by attention. In this event-related functional magnetic resonance imaging study in 22 healthy young volunteers, we examined in which regions orienting attention to two fundamental and generic dimensions of word meaning, concreteness versus valence, alters the semantic representations coded in activity patterns. The stimuli consisted of 120 nouns in written or spoken modality which varied factorially along the concreteness and valence axis. Participants performed a forced-choice judgement of either concreteness or valence. Rostral and subgenual anterior cingulate were strongly activated during valence judgement, and precuneus and the dorsal attention network during concreteness judgement. Task and stimulus type interacted in right posterior fusiform gyrus, left lingual gyrus, precuneus, and insula. In the right posterior fusiform gyrus and the left lingual gyrus, the correlation between the pairwise similarity in activity patterns evoked by words and the pairwise distance in valence and concreteness was modulated by the direction of attention, word valence or concreteness. The data indicate that orienting attention to basic dimensions of word meaning exerts effects on the representation of word meaning in more peripheral nodes, such as the ventral occipital cortex, rather than the core perisylvian language regions.

Funder

KU Leuven

Research Foundation Flanders

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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