Abstract Most studies of conceptual knowledge in the brain focus on a narrow range of concrete conceptual categories, rely on the researchers' intuitions about which object belongs to these categories, and assume a broadly taxonomic organization of knowledge. In this fMRI study, we focus on concepts with a variety of concreteness levels; we use a state of the art lexical resource (WordNet 3.1) as the source for a relatively large number of category distinctions and compare a taxonomic style of organization with a domain-based model (an example domain is Law). Participants mentally simulated situations associated with concepts when cued by text stimuli. Using multivariate pattern analysis, we find evidence that all Taxonomic c...
Important advances have recently been made using computational semantic models to de- code brain act...
Unlike concrete, nouns refer to notions beyond our perception. Even though there is no consensus amo...
The neural mechanisms subserving the processing of abstract concepts remain largely debated. Even wi...
Representation of semantic knowledge is an important aspect of cognitive function. The processing of...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
Concrete conceptual knowledge is supported by a distributed neural network representing different se...
Neuroscientific research on conceptual knowledge based on the grounded cognition framework has shed ...
A neurobiologically constrained deep neural network mimicking cortical areas relevant for sensorimot...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
This study is a first attempt to unravel the almost unexplored domain of abstract conceptual knowled...
Category production tasks (aka semantic fluency) typically concentrate on concrete categories, meani...
For decades, researchers have debated whether mental representations are symbolic or grounded in sen...
AbstractIn this paper we show that a corpus of a few thousand Wikipedia articles about concrete or v...
Noun/verb dissociations in the literature defy interpretation due to the confound between lexical ca...
AbstractNoun/verb dissociations in the literature defy interpretation due to the confound between le...
Important advances have recently been made using computational semantic models to de- code brain act...
Unlike concrete, nouns refer to notions beyond our perception. Even though there is no consensus amo...
The neural mechanisms subserving the processing of abstract concepts remain largely debated. Even wi...
Representation of semantic knowledge is an important aspect of cognitive function. The processing of...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
Concrete conceptual knowledge is supported by a distributed neural network representing different se...
Neuroscientific research on conceptual knowledge based on the grounded cognition framework has shed ...
A neurobiologically constrained deep neural network mimicking cortical areas relevant for sensorimot...
A consolidated approach to the study of the mental representation of word meanings has consisted in ...
This study is a first attempt to unravel the almost unexplored domain of abstract conceptual knowled...
Category production tasks (aka semantic fluency) typically concentrate on concrete categories, meani...
For decades, researchers have debated whether mental representations are symbolic or grounded in sen...
AbstractIn this paper we show that a corpus of a few thousand Wikipedia articles about concrete or v...
Noun/verb dissociations in the literature defy interpretation due to the confound between lexical ca...
AbstractNoun/verb dissociations in the literature defy interpretation due to the confound between le...
Important advances have recently been made using computational semantic models to de- code brain act...
Unlike concrete, nouns refer to notions beyond our perception. Even though there is no consensus amo...
The neural mechanisms subserving the processing of abstract concepts remain largely debated. Even wi...