We investigated the neural correlates of concrete nouns with either many or few semantic features. A group of 21 participants underwent two days of training and were then asked to categorize 40 newly learned words and a set of matched familiar words as living or nonliving in an MRI scanner. Our results showed that the most reliable effects of semantic richness were located in the left angular gyrus (AG) and middle temporal gyrus (MTG), where activation was higher for semantically rich than poor words. Other areas showing the same pattern included bilateral precuneus and posterior cingulate gyrus. Our findings support the view that AG and anterior MTG, as part of the multimodal network, play a significant role in representing and integrating...
A neurocomputational architecture of the left-hemispheric areas of the brain is presented which was ...
Our capacity to derive meaning from things that we see and words that we hear is unparalleled in oth...
Making sense of the world around us depends upon selectively retrieving information relevant to our ...
A class of semantic theories defines concepts in terms of statistical distributions of lexical items...
Semantic retrieval is flexible, allowing us to focus on subsets of features and associations that ar...
Semantic memory comprises our knowledge of the meanings of words and objects but only some of this k...
The neural principles behind semantic category representation are still under debate. Dominant theor...
This thesis aimed to shed light on the process of word learning and the consequences of storing, ret...
This thesis will describe two functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) experiments and one Voxel...
Semantic control allows us to shape our conceptual retrieval to suit the circumstances in a flexible...
Efficient semantic cognition depends on accessing and selecting conceptual knowledge relevant to the...
The richness of semantic representations associated with individual words has emerged as an importan...
Effective semantic processing requires both stored conceptual knowledge and the ability to relate th...
One of the most controversial debates in cognitive neuroscience concerns the cortical locus of seman...
The distinction between letter strings that form words and those that look and sound plausible but a...
A neurocomputational architecture of the left-hemispheric areas of the brain is presented which was ...
Our capacity to derive meaning from things that we see and words that we hear is unparalleled in oth...
Making sense of the world around us depends upon selectively retrieving information relevant to our ...
A class of semantic theories defines concepts in terms of statistical distributions of lexical items...
Semantic retrieval is flexible, allowing us to focus on subsets of features and associations that ar...
Semantic memory comprises our knowledge of the meanings of words and objects but only some of this k...
The neural principles behind semantic category representation are still under debate. Dominant theor...
This thesis aimed to shed light on the process of word learning and the consequences of storing, ret...
This thesis will describe two functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging (fMRI) experiments and one Voxel...
Semantic control allows us to shape our conceptual retrieval to suit the circumstances in a flexible...
Efficient semantic cognition depends on accessing and selecting conceptual knowledge relevant to the...
The richness of semantic representations associated with individual words has emerged as an importan...
Effective semantic processing requires both stored conceptual knowledge and the ability to relate th...
One of the most controversial debates in cognitive neuroscience concerns the cortical locus of seman...
The distinction between letter strings that form words and those that look and sound plausible but a...
A neurocomputational architecture of the left-hemispheric areas of the brain is presented which was ...
Our capacity to derive meaning from things that we see and words that we hear is unparalleled in oth...
Making sense of the world around us depends upon selectively retrieving information relevant to our ...