TY - JOUR
T1 - Localisation of function for noun and verb reading
T2 - Converging evidence for shared processing from fMRI activation and reaction time
AU - Borowsky, Ron
AU - Esopenko, Carrie
AU - Gould, Layla
AU - Kuhlmann, Naila
AU - Sarty, Gordon
AU - Cummine, Jacqueline
N1 - Funding Information:
Correspondence should be addressed to Ron Borowsky, Department of Psychology, University of Saskatchewan, 9 Campus Drive, Saskatoon SK S7N 5A5, Canada. E-mail: ron.borowsky@usask.ca This research was supported by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council (NSERC) of Canada in the form of research grants to R.B. and G.S., doctoral scholarships to J.C. and C.E., an undergraduate scholarship to N.K. and a research assistantship to L.G.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Some researchers have argued in favour of verbs primarily activating the left frontal operculum (FO) in the dorsal stream, and left middle temporal (MT) region in the ventral stream, and that nouns primarily activate the left inferior temporal (IT) region in the ventral stream. Others have suggested that the activation representing noun and verb processing involves a shared neural network. We explored these hypotheses through the naming of identical, homonymous, separately cued nouns (the bat) and verbs (to bat) presented in word format using a modified naming task that ensured participants were treating the target as the appropriate part of speech (POS). Using homonymous homographs for both the noun and verb referents provides for an optimally controlled comparison given the target stimuli and responses are physically identical. Experiment 1 was a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment that showed that the majority of activation was shared by both the noun and verb naming conditions, across both the ventral and dorsal streams, including the regions suggested by previous researchers as unique to verbs (FO, MT) or nouns (IT). In contrast, there was little unique activation attributable to noun processing, and practically no unique activation attributable to verb processing. This experiment, which supports a spatially shared ventral and dorsal network for noun and verb naming, was the impetus for new hypotheses involving the sharing of processes in time. Experiment 2 showed an overadditive interaction on naming reaction time (RT) between POS and bigram frequency, which provided converging evidence that the shared processing for nouns and verbs involves sublexical processing, whereas an overadditive interaction between POS and word frequency provided converging evidence that the shared processing also involves orthographic lexical access. As such, our study provides converging fMRI and RT evidence that noun and verb reading predominantly share processing along both the ventral-lexical and dorsal-sublexical reading streams.
AB - Some researchers have argued in favour of verbs primarily activating the left frontal operculum (FO) in the dorsal stream, and left middle temporal (MT) region in the ventral stream, and that nouns primarily activate the left inferior temporal (IT) region in the ventral stream. Others have suggested that the activation representing noun and verb processing involves a shared neural network. We explored these hypotheses through the naming of identical, homonymous, separately cued nouns (the bat) and verbs (to bat) presented in word format using a modified naming task that ensured participants were treating the target as the appropriate part of speech (POS). Using homonymous homographs for both the noun and verb referents provides for an optimally controlled comparison given the target stimuli and responses are physically identical. Experiment 1 was a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) experiment that showed that the majority of activation was shared by both the noun and verb naming conditions, across both the ventral and dorsal streams, including the regions suggested by previous researchers as unique to verbs (FO, MT) or nouns (IT). In contrast, there was little unique activation attributable to noun processing, and practically no unique activation attributable to verb processing. This experiment, which supports a spatially shared ventral and dorsal network for noun and verb naming, was the impetus for new hypotheses involving the sharing of processes in time. Experiment 2 showed an overadditive interaction on naming reaction time (RT) between POS and bigram frequency, which provided converging evidence that the shared processing for nouns and verbs involves sublexical processing, whereas an overadditive interaction between POS and word frequency provided converging evidence that the shared processing also involves orthographic lexical access. As such, our study provides converging fMRI and RT evidence that noun and verb reading predominantly share processing along both the ventral-lexical and dorsal-sublexical reading streams.
KW - Dorsal-sublexical
KW - Noun reading
KW - Ventral-lexical
KW - Verb reading
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U2 - 10.1080/01690965.2012.665466
DO - 10.1080/01690965.2012.665466
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84879517627
SN - 2327-3798
VL - 28
SP - 789
EP - 809
JO - Language, Cognition and Neuroscience
JF - Language, Cognition and Neuroscience
IS - 6
ER -