Language, Cognition and Neuroscience | 2019

Localising memory retrieval and syntactic composition: an fMRI study of naturalistic language comprehension

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


ABSTRACT This study examines memory retrieval and syntactic composition using fMRI while participants listen to a book, The Little Prince. These two processes are quantified drawing on methods from computational linguistics. Memory retrieval is quantified via multi-word expressions that are likely to be stored as a unit, rather than built-up compositionally. Syntactic composition is quantified via bottom-up parsing that tracks tree-building work needed in composed syntactic phrases. Regression analyses localise these to spatially-distinct brain regions. Composition mainly correlates with bilateral activity in anterior temporal lobe and inferior frontal gyrus. Retrieval of stored expressions drives right-lateralised activation in the precuneus. Less cohesive expressions activate well-known nodes of the language network implicated in composition. These results help to detail the neuroanatomical bases of two widely-assumed cognitive operations in language processing.

Volume 34
Pages 491 - 510
DOI 10.1080/23273798.2018.1518533
Language English
Journal Language, Cognition and Neuroscience

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