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Localising memory retrieval and syntactic composition: an fMRI study of naturalistic language comprehension

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posted on 2018-09-16, 14:24 authored by Shohini Bhattasali, Murielle Fabre, Wen-Ming Luh, Hazem Al Saied, Mathieu Constant, Christophe Pallier, Jonathan R. Brennan, R. Nathan Spreng, John Hale

This study examines memory retrieval and syntactic composition using fMRI while participants listen to a book, The Little Prince. These two processes are quantified drawing on methods from computational linguistics. Memory retrieval is quantified via multi-word expressions that are likely to be stored as a unit, rather than built-up compositionally. Syntactic composition is quantified via bottom-up parsing that tracks tree-building work needed in composed syntactic phrases. Regression analyses localise these to spatially-distinct brain regions. Composition mainly correlates with bilateral activity in anterior temporal lobe and inferior frontal gyrus. Retrieval of stored expressions drives right-lateralised activation in the precuneus. Less cohesive expressions activate well-known nodes of the language network implicated in composition. These results help to detail the neuroanatomical bases of two widely-assumed cognitive operations in language processing.

Funding

This material is based upon work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant Number 1607441 (USA). We also gratefully acknowledge support from the French National Research Agency (ANR) under grants ANR-14-CERA-0001 and ANR-16-NEUC-0005-01.

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    Language Cognition and Neuroscience

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