» Articles » PMID: 17611124

On Sense and Reference: Examining the Functional Neuroanatomy of Referential Processing

Overview
Journal Neuroimage
Specialty Radiology
Date 2007 Jul 6
PMID 17611124
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In an event-related fMRI study, we examined the cortical networks involved in establishing reference during language comprehension. We compared BOLD responses to sentences containing referentially ambiguous pronouns (e.g., "Ronald told Frank that he..."), referentially failing pronouns (e.g., "Rose told Emily that he...") or coherent pronouns. Referential ambiguity selectively recruited medial prefrontal regions, suggesting that readers engaged in problem-solving to select a unique referent from the discourse model. Referential failure elicited activation increases in brain regions associated with morpho-syntactic processing, and, for those readers who took failing pronouns to refer to unmentioned entities, additional regions associated with elaborative inferencing were observed. The networks activated by these two referential problems did not overlap with the network activated by a standard semantic anomaly. Instead, we observed a double dissociation, in that the systems activated by semantic anomaly are deactivated by referential ambiguity, and vice versa. This inverse coupling may reflect the dynamic recruitment of semantic and episodic processing to resolve semantically or referentially problematic situations. More generally, our findings suggest that neurocognitive accounts of language comprehension need to address not just how we parse a sentence and combine individual word meanings, but also how we determine who's who and what's what during language comprehension.

Citing Articles

Age-related differences in memory encoding and retrieval during referential processing: A time-frequency analysis.

Karimi H, Boudewyn M, Vandenheever D, Diaz M Psychol Aging. 2024; 39(7):731-749.

PMID: 39495563 PMC: 11537493. DOI: 10.1037/pag0000857.


Adapting to Changes in Communication: The Orbitofrontal Cortex in Language and Speech Processing.

Jiang X, Ma X, Sanford R, Li X Brain Sci. 2024; 14(3).

PMID: 38539652 PMC: 10969001. DOI: 10.3390/brainsci14030264.


Disintegration at the Syntax-Semantics Interface in Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease: New Evidence from Complex Sentence Anaphora in Amnestic Mild Cognitive Impairment (aMCI).

Lust B, Flynn S, Henderson C, Gair J, Sherman J J Neurolinguistics. 2024; 70.

PMID: 38370310 PMC: 10871704. DOI: 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2023.101190.


The spatiotemporal dynamics of semantic integration in the human brain.

Murphy E, Forseth K, Donos C, Snyder K, Rollo P, Tandon N Nat Commun. 2023; 14(1):6336.

PMID: 37875526 PMC: 10598228. DOI: 10.1038/s41467-023-42087-8.


Neural correlates of pronoun processing: An activation likelihood estimation meta-analysis.

El Ouardi L, Yeou M, Faroqi-Shah Y Brain Lang. 2023; 246:105347.

PMID: 37847932 PMC: 11305457. DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2023.105347.