» Articles » PMID: 20183014

A Case for Conflict Across Multiple Domains: Memory and Language Impairments Following Damage to Ventrolateral Prefrontal Cortex

Overview
Publisher Routledge
Specialties Neurology
Psychology
Date 2010 Feb 26
PMID 20183014
Citations 68
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Patients with focal lesions to the left inferior frontal gyrus (LIFG; BA 44/45) exhibit difficulty with language production and comprehension tasks, although the nature of their impairments has been somewhat difficult to characterize. No reported cases suggest that these patients are Broca's aphasics in the classic agrammatic sense. Recent case studies, however, do reveal a consistent pattern of deficit regarding their general cognitive processes: they are reliably impaired on tasks in which conflicting representations must be resolved by implementing top-down cognitive control (e.g., Stroop; memory tasks involving proactive interference). In the present study, we ask whether the language production and comprehension impairments displayed by a patient with circumscribed LIFG damage can best be understood within a general conflict resolution deficit account. We focus on one patient in particular--patient I.G.--and discuss the implications for language processing abilities as a consequence of a general cognitive control disorder. We compared I.G. and other frontal patients to age-matched control participants across four experiments. Experiment 1 tested participants' general conflict resolution abilities within a modified working memory paradigm in an attempt to replicate prior case study findings. We then tested language production abilities on tasks of picture naming (Experiment 2) and verbal fluency (Experiment 3), tasks that generated conflict at the semantic and/or conceptual levels. Experiment 4 tested participants' sentence processing and comprehension abilities using both online (eye movement) and offline measures. In this task, participants carried out spoken instructions containing a syntactic ambiguity, in which early interpretation commitments had to be overridden in order to recover an alternative, intended analysis of sentence meaning. Comparisons of I.G.'s performance with frontal and healthy control participants supported the following claim: I.G. suffers from a general conflict resolution impairment, which affects his ability to produce and comprehend language under specific conditions--namely, when semantic, conceptual, and/or syntactic representations compete and must be resolved.

Citing Articles

Noisy-channel language comprehension in aphasia: A Bayesian mixture modeling approach.

Ryskin R, Gibson E, Kiran S Psychon Bull Rev. 2025; .

PMID: 39875783 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-025-02639-z.


Conflict Adaptation in Aphasia: Upregulating Cognitive Control for Improved Sentence Comprehension.

Krason A, Middleton E, Ambrogi M, Thothathiri M J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2024; 67(11):4411-4430.

PMID: 39378278 PMC: 11567075. DOI: 10.1044/2024_JSLHR-23-00768.


Direct impact of cognitive control on sentence processing and comprehension.

Hsu N, Kuchinsky S, Novick J Lang Cogn Neurosci. 2024; 36(2):211-239.

PMID: 39035844 PMC: 11258758. DOI: 10.1080/23273798.2020.1836379.


Multimodal measures of sentence comprehension in agrammatism.

Thothathiri M, Kirkwood J, Patra A, Krason A, Middleton E Cortex. 2023; 169:309-325.

PMID: 37981441 PMC: 10872620. DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2023.09.017.


Neural Mechanisms Underlying the Dynamic Updating of Native Language.

Sharer K, Thothathiri M Neurobiol Lang (Camb). 2023; 1(4):492-522.

PMID: 37215586 PMC: 10158591. DOI: 10.1162/nol_a_00023.


References
1.
Dickey M, Thompson C . Automatic processing of wh- and NP-movement in agrammatic aphasia: Evidence from eyetracking. J Neurolinguistics. 2010; 22(6):563-583. PMC: 2748948. DOI: 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2009.06.004. View

2.
Badre D, Wagner A . Semantic retrieval, mnemonic control, and prefrontal cortex. Behav Cogn Neurosci Rev. 2007; 1(3):206-18. DOI: 10.1177/1534582302001003002. View

3.
Spivey M, Tanenhaus M, Eberhard K, Sedivy J . Eye movements and spoken language comprehension: effects of visual context on syntactic ambiguity resolution. Cogn Psychol. 2002; 45(4):447-81. DOI: 10.1016/s0010-0285(02)00503-0. View

4.
Yerys B, Munakata Y . When labels hurt but novelty helps: children's perseveration and flexibility in a card-sorting task. Child Dev. 2006; 77(6):1589-607. DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-8624.2006.00961.x. View

5.
Novick J, Thompson-Schill S, Trueswell J . Putting lexical constraints in context into the visual-world paradigm. Cognition. 2008; 107(3):850-903. PMC: 3863633. DOI: 10.1016/j.cognition.2007.12.011. View