Neuropsychological and activation studies on the neural correlates of abstract and concrete words have produced contrasting results. The present study explores the anatomical substrates of abstract/concrete words in 22 brain-damaged patients with a single vascular lesion either in the right or left hemisphere. One hundred and twenty (60 concrete and 60 abstract) noun triplets were used for a semantic similarity judgment task. We found a significant interaction in word type × group since left temporal brain-damaged patients performed significantly better with concrete than abstract words. Lesion mapping of patients with predominant temporal damage showed that the left superior and middle temporal gyri and the insula were the areas of major overlapping, while the anterior portion of the left temporal lobe was generally spared. Errors on abstract words mainly concerned (although at a non-significant level) semantically associate targets, while in the case of concrete words, coordinate targets were significantly more impaired than associate ones. Our results suggest that the left superior and middle temporal gyri and the insula are crucial regions in processing abstract words. They also confirm the hypothesis of a semantic similarity vs. associative organization of concrete and abstract concepts

Papagno, C., Martello, G., Mattavelli, G. (2013). The Neural Correlates of Abstract and Concrete Words: Evidence from Brain-Damaged Patients. BRAIN SCIENCES, 3, 1229-1243 [10.3390/brainsci3031229].

The Neural Correlates of Abstract and Concrete Words: Evidence from Brain-Damaged Patients

PAPAGNO, COSTANZA
;
MATTAVELLI, GIULIA CAMILLA
2013

Abstract

Neuropsychological and activation studies on the neural correlates of abstract and concrete words have produced contrasting results. The present study explores the anatomical substrates of abstract/concrete words in 22 brain-damaged patients with a single vascular lesion either in the right or left hemisphere. One hundred and twenty (60 concrete and 60 abstract) noun triplets were used for a semantic similarity judgment task. We found a significant interaction in word type × group since left temporal brain-damaged patients performed significantly better with concrete than abstract words. Lesion mapping of patients with predominant temporal damage showed that the left superior and middle temporal gyri and the insula were the areas of major overlapping, while the anterior portion of the left temporal lobe was generally spared. Errors on abstract words mainly concerned (although at a non-significant level) semantically associate targets, while in the case of concrete words, coordinate targets were significantly more impaired than associate ones. Our results suggest that the left superior and middle temporal gyri and the insula are crucial regions in processing abstract words. They also confirm the hypothesis of a semantic similarity vs. associative organization of concrete and abstract concepts
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
concreteness; temporal lobe; insula; associative vs. categorical architecture
English
2013
3
1229
1243
none
Papagno, C., Martello, G., Mattavelli, G. (2013). The Neural Correlates of Abstract and Concrete Words: Evidence from Brain-Damaged Patients. BRAIN SCIENCES, 3, 1229-1243 [10.3390/brainsci3031229].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/46121
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