The Neural Mechanisms of Speech Comprehension: fMRI studies of Semantic Ambiguity
Universities UK · University College London · +2 more institutions
Abstract
A number of regions of the temporal and frontal lobes are known to be important for spoken language comprehension, yet we do not have a clear understanding of their functional role(s). In particular, there is considerable disagreement about which brain regions are involved in the semantic aspects of comprehension. Two functional magnetic resonance studies use the phenomenon of semantic ambiguity to identify regions within the fronto-temporal language network that subserve the semantic aspects of spoken language comprehension. Volunteers heard sentences containing ambiguous words (e.g. 'the shell was fired towards the tank') and well-matched low-ambiguity sentences (e.g. 'her secrets were written in her…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 10.89
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 44
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Ambiguity
- Comprehension
- Functional magnetic resonance imaging
- Meaning (existential)
- Semantic memory
- Psychology
- Computer science
- Linguistics
- Quality Education