The differential contributions of pFC and temporo-parietal cortex to multimodal semantic control: Exploring refractory effects in semantic aphasia

Hannah E. Gardner, Matthew A. Lambon Ralph, Naomi Dodds, Theresa Jones, Sheeba Ehsan, Elizabeth Jefferies

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    Abstract

    Aphasic patients with multimodal semantic impairment following pFC or temporo-parietal (TP) cortex damage (semantic aphasia [SA]) have deficits characterized by poor control of semantic activation/retrieval, as opposed to loss of semantic knowledge per se. In line with this, SA patients show "refractory effects"; that is, decliningaccuracy incyclical word-picture matchingtasks when semantically related sets are presented rapidly and repeatedly. This is argued to follow a build-up of competition between targets and distractors.However, the link betweenpoor semantic control and refractory effects is still controversial for two reasons. (1) Some theories propose that refractory effects are specific to verbal or auditory tasks, yet SA patients show poor control over semantic processing in both word and picture semantic tasks. (2) SA can result from lesions to either the left pFC or TP cortex, yet previous work suggests that refractory effects are specifically linked to the left inferior frontal cortex. For the first time, verbal, visual, and nonverbal auditory refractory effects were explored in nine SA patients who had pFC (pFC+) or TP cortex (TP-only) lesions. In all modalities, patient accuracy declined significantlyover repetitions.Thisrefractory effectat the group level was driven by pFC+ patients and was not shown by individuals with TP-only lesions. These findings support the theory that SA patients have reduced control over multimodal semantic retrieval and, additionally, suggest there may be functional specialization within the posterior versus pFC elements of the semantic control network. © 2012 Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)778-793
    Number of pages15
    JournalJournal of Cognitive Neuroscience
    Volume24
    Issue number4
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Apr 2012

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