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    Cortex. 2008 Mar;44(3):257-75. Epub 2007 Nov 19.

    Task-dependent and task-independent neurovascular responses to syntactic processing.

    Source

    Neuropsychology Laboratory, Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, MA 02114, USA. dcaplan@partners.org

    Abstract

    The neural basis for syntactic processing was studied using event-related fMRI to determine the locations of BOLD signal increases in the contrast of syntactically complex sentences with center-embedded, object-extracted relative clauses and syntactically simple sentences with right-branching, subject-extracted relative clauses in a group of 15 participants in three tasks. In a sentence verification task, participants saw a target sentence in one of these two syntactic forms, followed by a probe in a simple active form, and determined whether the probe expressed a proposition in the target. In a plausibility judgment task, participants determined whether a sentence in one of these two syntactic forms was plausible or implausible. Finally, in a non-word detection task, participants determined whether a sentence in one of these two syntactic forms contained only real words or a non-word. BOLD signal associated with the syntactic contrast increased in the left posterior inferior frontal gyrus in non-word detection and in a widespread set of areas in the other two tasks. We conclude that the BOLD activity in the left posterior inferior frontal gyrus reflects syntactic processing independent of concurrent cognitive operations and the more widespread areas of activation reflect the use of strategies and the use of the products of syntactic processing to accomplish tasks.

    PMID:
    18387556
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
    PMCID:
    PMC2427191
    Free PMC Article

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