The relationship between brain images observed by PET and fMRI and the underlying neural activity is analysed using recent results on the detailed nature of averaged and synchronised activity of coupled neural networks and on a simplifying model of the level of blood flow caused by neural activity.
Relation between brain activation and lexical performance
β Scribed by James R. Booth; Douglas D. Burman; Joel R. Meyer; Darren R. Gitelman; Todd B. Parrish; M. Marsel Mesulam
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 344 KB
- Volume
- 19
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1065-9471
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to determine whether performance on lexical tasks was correlated with cerebral activation patterns. We found that such relationships did exist and that their anatomical distribution reflected the neurocognitive processing routes required by the task. Better performance on intramodal tasks (determining if visual words were spelled the same or if auditory words rhymed) was correlated with more activation in unimodal regions corresponding to the modality of sensory input, namely the fusiform gyrus (BA 37) for written words and the superior temporal gyrus (BA 22) for spoken words. Better performance in tasks requiring crossβmodal conversions (determining if auditory words were spelled the same or if visual words rhymed), on the other hand, was correlated with more activation in posterior heteromodal regions, including the supramarginal gyrus (BA 40) and the angular gyrus (BA 39). Better performance in these crossβmodal tasks was also correlated with greater activation in unimodal regions corresponding to the target modality of the conversion process (i.e., fusiform gyrus for auditory spelling and superior temporal gyrus for visual rhyming). In contrast, performance on the auditory spelling task was inversely correlated with activation in the superior temporal gyrus possibly reflecting a greater emphasis on the properties of the perceptual input rather than on the relevant transmodal conversions. Hum. Brain Mapping 19:155β169, 2003. Β© 2003 WileyβLiss, Inc.
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