17 results on '"Ullman, Michael T."'
Search Results
2. List of Contributors
- Author
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Ackermann, Hermann, primary, Adenzato, Mauro, additional, Alkire, Diana R., additional, Arnal, Luc H., additional, Ávila, Cesar, additional, Bara, Bruno G., additional, Barton, Brian, additional, Baum, Shari R., additional, Beauchamp, Michael S., additional, Binder, Jeffrey R., additional, Binkofski, Ferdinand Christoph, additional, Blau, Shane, additional, Blumstein, Sheila E., additional, Bormann, Tobias, additional, Bornkessel-Schlesewsky, Ina, additional, Branzi, Francesca M., additional, Brendel, Bettina, additional, Brewer, Alyssa A., additional, Broce, Iris, additional, Brown, Timothy T., additional, Buchsbaum, Bradley R., additional, Caplan, David, additional, Caspers, Svenja, additional, Centanni, Tracy M., additional, Chang, Edward F., additional, Chesters, Jennifer, additional, Çokal, Derya, additional, Connally, Emily L., additional, Corina, David P., additional, Coslett, H. Branch, additional, Costa, Albert, additional, Cramer, Steven C., additional, Curtin, Suzanne, additional, Davis, Matthew H., additional, Dell, Gary S., additional, Demir, Özlem Ece, additional, Deschamps, Isabelle, additional, Dick, Anthony Steven, additional, Dick, Frederic, additional, Dickson, Danielle S., additional, Duffau, Hugues, additional, Duncan, E. Susan, additional, Eden, Guinevere F., additional, Engineer, Crystal T., additional, Enrici, Ivan, additional, Evans, Julia L., additional, Evans, Tanya M., additional, Fadiga, Luciano, additional, Federmeier, Kara D., additional, Ferreira, Fernanda, additional, Ferstl, Evelyn C., additional, Fiez, Julie A., additional, Fisher, Simon E., additional, Fowler, Carol A., additional, Fridriksson, Julius, additional, Friederici, Angela D., additional, Gandour, Jackson T., additional, Geranmayeh, Fatemeh, additional, Gernsbacher, Morton Ann, additional, Ghio, Marta, additional, Giraud, Anne-Lise, additional, Goldin-Meadow, Susan, additional, Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa, additional, Gracco, Vincent L., additional, Grace, Elizabeth J., additional, Greene, Deanna J., additional, Guenther, Frank H., additional, Hagoort, Peter, additional, Hasson, Uri, additional, Hauk, Olaf, additional, Heald, Shannon, additional, Hernandez, Arturo E., additional, Hickok, Gregory, additional, Hillis, Argye E., additional, Holt, Lori L., additional, Hornstein, Norbert, additional, Houde, John F., additional, Idsardi, William J., additional, Jacobs, Cassandra L., additional, Jenkinson, Ned, additional, Johnsrude, Ingrid S., additional, Kilgard, Michael P., additional, Kircher, Tilo, additional, Klann, Juliane, additional, Klos, Serena, additional, Kotz, Sonja A., additional, Krafnick, Anthony J., additional, Krishnan, Ananthanarayan, additional, Krishnan, Saloni, additional, Kuemmerer, Dorothee, additional, Kutas, Marta, additional, Leech, Robert, additional, Leonard, Matthew K., additional, Lessov-Schlaggar, Christina N., additional, Levine, Susan C., additional, Llano, Daniel A., additional, Lotto, Andrew J., additional, Marantz, Alec, additional, McLennan, Conor T., additional, Meyer, Lars, additional, Miller, Lee M., additional, Mohr, Bettina, additional, Monahan, Philip J., additional, Morson, Emily M., additional, Musso, Mariachristina, additional, Nagarajan, Srikantan S., additional, Nagels, Arne, additional, Nguyen, Hal X., additional, Nozari, Nazbanou, additional, Nusbaum, Howard, additional, Olulade, Olumide A., additional, Patterson, Karalyn, additional, Paulmann, Silke, additional, Petrides, Michael, additional, Pisoni, David B., additional, Poeppel, David, additional, Pressman, Peter, additional, Pulvermüller, Friedemann, additional, Pylkkänen, Liina, additional, Beharelle, Anjali Raja, additional, Ralph, Matthew A. Lambon, additional, Rastle, Kathleen, additional, Rauschecker, Josef P., additional, Richardson, Jessica D., additional, Rijntjes, Michel, additional, Rizzolatti, Giacomo, additional, Rodd, Jennifer M., additional, Rogalsky, Corianne, additional, Rozzi, Stefano, additional, Saygin, Ayşe Pinar, additional, Schlaggar, Bradley L., additional, Schlaug, Gottfried, additional, Schlesewsky, Matthias, additional, Schwartz, Myrna F., additional, Schwartze, Michael, additional, Scott, Sophie K., additional, Small, Steven L., additional, Smith, Kimberly, additional, Sprouse, Jon, additional, Staiger, Anja, additional, Stark, Craig E.L., additional, Stark, Shauna M., additional, Staub, Adrian, additional, Taub, Edward, additional, Tettamanti, Marco, additional, Thompson-Schill, Sharon L., additional, Tippett, Donna C., additional, Tremblay, Pascale, additional, Turkeltaub, Peter, additional, Ullman, Michael T., additional, Watkins, Kate E., additional, Weiller, Cornelius, additional, Wise, Richard J.S., additional, Zacks, Jeffrey M., additional, and Ziegler, Wolfram, additional
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- 2016
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3. Sequence learning in the human brain: A functional neuroanatomical meta-analysis of serial reaction time studies
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Janacsek, Karolina, Shattuck, Kyle F., Tagarelli, Kaitlyn M., Lum, Jarrad A.G., Turkeltaub, Peter E., Ullman, Michael T., Janacsek, Karolina, Shattuck, Kyle F., Tagarelli, Kaitlyn M., Lum, Jarrad A.G., Turkeltaub, Peter E., and Ullman, Michael T.
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- 2020
4. Data and analysis script for infant and adult eye movement in an adapted ocular-motor serial reaction time task assessing procedural memory
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Koch, Felix-Sebastian, Sundqvist, Anett (Annette), Birberg Thornberg, Ulrika, Ullman, Michael T., Barr, Rachel, Rudner, Mary, Heimann, Mikael, Koch, Felix-Sebastian, Sundqvist, Anett (Annette), Birberg Thornberg, Ulrika, Ullman, Michael T., Barr, Rachel, Rudner, Mary, and Heimann, Mikael
- Abstract
This article provides a description of eye movement data collected during an ocular-motor serial reaction time task. Raw gaze data files for 63 infants and 24 adults along with the data processing and analysis script for extracting saccade latencies, summarizing participants performance, and testing statistical differences, are hosted on Open Science Framework (OSF). Files (in Matlab format) available for download allow for replication of the results reported in "Procedural memory in infancy: Evidence from implicit sequence learning in an eye-tracking paradigm" [1]. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc., Funding Agencies|Swedish Research Council (Vetenskapsradet)Swedish Research Council [2016-01033]
- Published
- 2020
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5. The Role of Memory Systems in Disorders of Language
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ULLMAN, MICHAEL T., primary
- Published
- 2008
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6. Contributors
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Amunts, Katrin, primary, Arbib, Michael A., additional, Bartels, Claudius, additional, Basso, Anna, additional, Beretta, Alan, additional, Boswell, Stephanie B., additional, Buckingham, Hugh W., additional, Cappa, Stefano F., additional, Christman, Sarah S., additional, Connolly, John F., additional, Crow, Timothy J., additional, Denes, Gianfranco, additional, Devlin, Joseph T., additional, Elsabbagh, Mayada, additional, Enderby, Pam, additional, Frishkoff, Gwen, additional, Gainotti, Guido, additional, Gordon, Barry, additional, Grossman, Murray, additional, Hasson, Uri, additional, Hellige, Joseph B., additional, Hillis, Argye E., additional, Hiscock, Merrill, additional, Horwitz, Barry, additional, Jarema, Gonia, additional, Kinsbourne, Marcel, additional, Ledoux, Kerry, additional, Lee, Andrew W., additional, Li, Ping, additional, Libben, Gary, additional, Luu, Phan, additional, Luzzatti, Claudio, additional, Macoir, Joël, additional, MacWhinney, Brian, additional, McDonald, Skye, additional, Mohn, Kirsten R., additional, Nadeau, Stephen E., additional, Nickels, Lyndsey, additional, Obler, Loraine K., additional, Paradis, Michel, additional, Pekkala, Seija, additional, Perfetti, Charles A., additional, Petheram, Brian, additional, Rodden, Frank A., additional, Rosenfield, David B., additional, Semenza, Carlo, additional, Siegal, Michael, additional, Small, Steven L., additional, Springer, Luise, additional, Steinhauer, Karsten, additional, Stemmer, Brigitte, additional, Surian, Luca, additional, Tracy, Joseph I., additional, Tröster, Alexander I., additional, Tucker, Don M., additional, Turgeon, Yves, additional, Ullman, Michael T., additional, Van Lancker Sidtis, Diana, additional, Wallesch, Claus-W., additional, Watkins, Kate E., additional, Whitaker, Harry A., additional, and Wise, Richard J.S., additional
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- 2008
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7. Verbal declarative memory impairments in specific language impairment are related to working memory deficits
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Lum, Jarrad A.G., Ullman, Michael T., Conti-Ramsden, Gina, Lum, Jarrad A.G., Ullman, Michael T., and Conti-Ramsden, Gina
- Abstract
This study examined verbal declarative memory functioning in SLI and its relationship to working memory. Encoding, recall, and recognition of verbal information was examined in children with SLI who had below average working memory (SLILow WM), children with SLI who had average working memory (SLIAvg. WM) and, a group of non-language impaired children with average working memory (TDAvg. WM). The SLILow WM group was significantly worse than both the SLIAvg. WM and TDAvg. WM groups at encoding verbal information and at retrieving verbal information following a delay. In contrast, the SLIAvg. WM group showed no verbal declarative memory deficits. The study demonstrates that verbal declarative memory deficits in SLI only occur when verbal working memory is impaired. Thus SLI declarative memory is largely intact and deficits are likely to be related to working memory impairments.
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- 2015
8. Procedural learning is impaired in dyslexia: evidence from a meta-analysis of serial reaction time studies
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Lum, Jarrad A.G., Ullman, Michael T., Conti-Ramsden, Gina, Lum, Jarrad A.G., Ullman, Michael T., and Conti-Ramsden, Gina
- Published
- 2013
9. Hijacking limitations of working memory load to test for composition in language.
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Ullman MT, Bulut T, and Walenski M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Language, Psycholinguistics, Phonetics, Memory, Short-Term physiology
- Abstract
Although language depends on storage and composition, just what is stored or (de)composed remains unclear. We leveraged working memory load limitations to test for composition, hypothesizing that decomposed forms should particularly tax working memory. We focused on a well-studied paradigm, English inflectional morphology. We predicted that (compositional) regulars should be harder to maintain in working memory than (non-compositional) irregulars, using a 3-back production task. Frequency, phonology, orthography, and other potentially confounding factors were controlled for. Compared to irregulars, regulars and their accompanying -s/-ing-affixed filler items yielded more errors. Underscoring the decomposition of only regulars, regulars yielded more bare-stem (e.g., walk) and stem affixation errors (walks/walking) than irregulars, whereas irregulars yielded more past-tense-form affixation errors (broughts/tolded). In line with previous evidence that regulars can be stored under certain conditions, the regular-irregular difference held specifically for phonologically consistent (not inconsistent) regulars, in particular for both low and high frequency consistent regulars in males, but only for low frequency consistent regulars in females. Sensitivity analyses suggested the findings were robust. The study further elucidates the computation of inflected forms, and introduces a simple diagnostic for linguistic composition., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2023. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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10. Aging affects steaks more than knives: Evidence that the processing of words related to motor skills is relatively spared in aging.
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Reifegerste J, Meyer AS, Zwitserlood P, and Ullman MT
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- Humans, Language, Motor Skills, Vocabulary
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Lexical-processing declines are a hallmark of aging. However, the extent of these declines may vary as a function of different factors. Motivated by findings from neurodegenerative diseases and healthy aging, we tested whether 'motor-relatedness' (the degree to which words are associated with particular human body movements) might moderate such declines. We investigated this question by examining data from three experiments. The experiments were carried out in different languages (Dutch, German, English) using different tasks (lexical decision, picture naming), and probed verbs and nouns, in all cases controlling for potentially confounding variables (e.g., frequency, age-of-acquisition, imageability). Whereas 'non-motor words' (e.g., steak) showed age-related performance decreases in all three experiments, 'motor words' (e.g., knife) yielded either smaller decreases (in one experiment) or no decreases (in two experiments). The findings suggest that motor-relatedness can attenuate or even prevent age-related lexical declines, perhaps due to the relative sparing of neural circuitry underlying such words., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2021
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11. A dissociation between syntactic and lexical processing in Parkinson's disease.
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Johari K, Walenski M, Reifegerste J, Ashrafi F, Behroozmand R, Daemi M, and Ullman MT
- Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD), which involves the degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the basal ganglia, has long been associated with motor deficits. Increasing evidence suggests that language can also be impaired, including aspects of syntactic and lexical processing. However, the exact pattern of these impairments remains somewhat unclear, for several reasons. Few studies have examined and compared syntactic and lexical processing within subjects, so their relative deficits remain to be elucidated. Studies have focused on earlier stages of PD, so syntactic and lexical processing in later stages are less well understood. Research has largely probed English and a handful of other European languages, and it is unclear whether findings generalize more broadly. Finally, few studies have examined links between syntactic/lexical impairments and their neurocognitive substrates, such as measures of basal ganglia degeneration or dopaminergic processes. We addressed these gaps by investigating multiple aspects of Farsi syntactic and lexical processing in 40 Farsi native-speaking moderate-to-severe non-demented PD patients, and 40 healthy controls. Analyses revealed equivalent impairments of syntactic comprehension and syntactic judgment, across different syntactic structures. Lexical processing was impaired only for motor function-related objects (e.g., naming 'hammer', but not 'mountain'), in line with findings of PD deficits at naming action verbs as compared to objects, without the verb/noun confound. In direct comparisons between lexical and syntactic tasks, patients were better at naming words like 'mountain' (but not words like 'hammer') than at syntactic comprehension and syntactic judgment. Performance at syntactic comprehension correlated with the last levodopa equivalent dose. No other correlations were found between syntactic/lexical processing measures and either levodopa equivalent dose or hypokinesia, which reflects degeneration of basal ganglia motor-related circuits. All critical significant main effects, interactions, and correlations yielded large effect sizes. The findings elucidate the nature of syntactic and lexical processing impairments in PD.
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- 2019
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12. A verbal strength in children with Tourette syndrome? Evidence from a non-word repetition task.
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Dye CD, Walenski M, Mostofsky SH, and Ullman MT
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- Adolescent, Basal Ganglia physiopathology, Case-Control Studies, Child, Female, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Humans, Male, Time Factors, Linguistics, Tourette Syndrome physiopathology
- Abstract
Tourette syndrome (TS) is characterized by motor and vocal tics, and frontal/basal-ganglia abnormalities. Whereas cognitive strengths have been found in other neurodevelopmental disorders, less attention has been paid to strengths in TS, or to verbal strengths in any neurodevelopmental disorder. We examined whether the finding of speeded TS production of rule-governed morphological forms (e.g., "slipped") that involve composition (Walenski, Mostofsky, & Ullman, 2007) might extend to another language domain, phonology. Thirteen children with TS and 14 typically-developing (TD) children performed a non-word repetition task: they repeated legal phonological strings (e.g.,"naichovabe"), a task that taps rule-governed (de)composition. Parallel to the morphology findings, the children with TS showed speeded production, while the two groups had similar accuracy. The results were not explained by potentially confounding factors, including IQ. Overall, the findings suggest that rule-governed grammatical composition may be speeded in TS, perhaps due to frontal/basal-ganglia abnormalities., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2016
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13. Verbal declarative memory impairments in specific language impairment are related to working memory deficits.
- Author
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Lum JA, Ullman MT, and Conti-Ramsden G
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- Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Male, Reference Values, Comprehension, Language Development Disorders diagnosis, Language Development Disorders psychology, Memory Disorders diagnosis, Memory Disorders psychology, Memory, Episodic, Memory, Short-Term, Semantics
- Abstract
This study examined verbal declarative memory functioning in SLI and its relationship to working memory. Encoding, recall, and recognition of verbal information was examined in children with SLI who had below average working memory (SLILow WM), children with SLI who had average working memory (SLIAvg. WM) and, a group of non-language impaired children with average working memory (TDAvg. WM). The SLILow WM group was significantly worse than both the SLIAvg. WM and TDAvg. WM groups at encoding verbal information and at retrieving verbal information following a delay. In contrast, the SLIAvg. WM group showed no verbal declarative memory deficits. The study demonstrates that verbal declarative memory deficits in SLI only occur when verbal working memory is impaired. Thus SLI declarative memory is largely intact and deficits are likely to be related to working memory impairments., (Crown Copyright © 2015. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2015
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14. Inflectional morphology in high-functioning autism: Evidence for speeded grammatical processing.
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Walenski M, Mostofsky SH, and Ullman MT
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Autism is characterized by language and communication deficits. We investigated grammatical and lexical processes in high-functioning autism by contrasting the production of regular and irregular past-tense forms. Boys with autism and typically-developing control boys did not differ in accuracy or error rates. However, boys with autism were significantly faster than controls at producing rule-governed past-tenses ( slip-slipped, plim-plimmed, bring-bringed ), though not lexically-dependent past-tenses ( bring-brought, squeeze-squeezed, splim-splam ). This pattern mirrors previous findings from Tourette syndrome attributed to abnormalities of frontal/basal-ganglia circuits that underlie grammar. We suggest a similar abnormality underlying language in autism. Importantly, even when children with autism show apparently normal language (e.g., in accuracy or with diagnostic instruments), processes and/or brain structures subserving language may be atypical in the disorder.
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- 2014
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15. Language deficits in pre-symptomatic Huntington's disease: evidence from Hungarian.
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Nemeth D, Dye CD, Sefcsik T, Janacsek K, Turi Z, Londe Z, Klivenyi P, Kincses ZT, Szabó N, Vecsei L, and Ullman MT
- Subjects
- Humans, Hungary, Language, Huntington Disease complications, Huntington Disease diagnosis, Language Disorders etiology
- Abstract
A limited number of studies have investigated language in Huntington's disease (HD). These have generally reported abnormalities in rule-governed (grammatical) aspects of language, in both syntax and morphology. Several studies of verbal inflectional morphology in English and French have reported evidence of over-active rule processing, such as over-suffixation errors (e.g., walkeded) and over-regularizations (e.g., digged). Here we extend the investigation to noun inflection in Hungarian, a Finno-Ugric agglutinative language with complex morphology, and to genetically proven pre-symptomatic Huntington's disease (pre-HD). Although individuals with pre-HD have no clinical, motor or cognitive symptoms, the underlying pathology may already have begun, and thus sensitive behavioral measures might reveal already-present impairments. Indeed, in a Hungarian morphology production task, pre-HD patients made both over-suffixation and over-regularization errors. The findings suggest the generality of over-active rule processing in both HD and pre-HD, across languages from different families with different morphological systems, and for both verbal and noun inflection. Because the neuropathology in pre-HD appears to be largely restricted to the caudate nucleus and related structures, the findings further implicate these structures in language, and in rule-processing in particular. Finally, the need for effective treatments in HD, which will likely depend in part on the ability to sensitively measure early changes in the disease, suggests the possibility that inflectional morphology, and perhaps other language measures, may provide useful diagnostic, tracking, and therapeutic tools for assessing and treating early degeneration in pre-HD and HD., (Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2012
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16. Neural correlates of lexicon and grammar: evidence from the production, reading, and judgment of inflection in aphasia.
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Ullman MT, Pancheva R, Love T, Yee E, Swinney D, and Hickok G
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- Adult, Aged, Anomia diagnosis, Anomia physiopathology, Aphasia, Broca diagnosis, Aphasia, Wernicke diagnosis, Attention physiology, Brain Mapping, Diagnostic Imaging, Dominance, Cerebral physiology, Dyslexia diagnosis, Dyslexia physiopathology, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Male, Memory, Short-Term physiology, Mental Recall physiology, Middle Aged, Nerve Net physiopathology, Parietal Lobe physiopathology, Reference Values, Statistics as Topic, Temporal Lobe physiopathology, Aphasia, Broca physiopathology, Aphasia, Wernicke physiopathology, Frontal Lobe physiopathology, Verbal Behavior physiology, Verbal Learning physiology
- Abstract
Are the linguistic forms that are memorized in the mental lexicon and those that are specified by the rules of grammar subserved by distinct neurocognitive systems or by a single computational system with relatively broad anatomic distribution? On a dual-system view, the productive -ed-suffixation of English regular past tense forms (e.g., look-looked) depends upon the mental grammar, whereas irregular forms (e.g., dig-dug) are retrieved from lexical memory. On a single-mechanism view, the computation of both past tense types depends on associative memory. Neurological double dissociations between regulars and irregulars strengthen the dual-system view. The computation of real and novel, regular and irregular past tense forms was investigated in 20 aphasic subjects. Aphasics with non-fluent agrammatic speech and left frontal lesions were consistently more impaired at the production, reading, and judgment of regular than irregular past tenses. Aphasics with fluent speech and word-finding difficulties, and with left temporal/temporo-parietal lesions, showed the opposite pattern. These patterns held even when measures of frequency, phonological complexity, articulatory difficulty, and other factors were held constant. The data support the view that the memorized words of the mental lexicon are subserved by a brain system involving left temporal/temporo-parietal structures, whereas aspects of the mental grammar, in particular the computation of regular morphological forms, are subserved by a distinct system involving left frontal structures.
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- 2005
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17. Contributions of memory circuits to language: the declarative/procedural model.
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Ullman MT
- Subjects
- Humans, Nerve Net physiology, Vocabulary, Language, Memory physiology, Nerve Net anatomy & histology
- Abstract
The structure of the brain and the nature of evolution suggest that, despite its uniqueness, language likely depends on brain systems that also subserve other functions. The declarative/procedural (DP) model claims that the mental lexicon of memorized word-specific knowledge depends on the largely temporal-lobe substrates of declarative memory, which underlies the storage and use of knowledge of facts and events. The mental grammar, which subserves the rule-governed combination of lexical items into complex representations, depends on a distinct neural system. This system, which is composed of a network of specific frontal, basal-ganglia, parietal and cerebellar structures, underlies procedural memory, which supports the learning and execution of motor and cognitive skills, especially those involving sequences. The functions of the two brain systems, together with their anatomical, physiological and biochemical substrates, lead to specific claims and predictions regarding their roles in language. These predictions are compared with those of other neurocognitive models of language. Empirical evidence is presented from neuroimaging studies of normal language processing, and from developmental and adult-onset disorders. It is argued that this evidence supports the DP model. It is additionally proposed that "language" disorders, such as specific language impairment and non-fluent and fluent aphasia, may be profitably viewed as impairments primarily affecting one or the other brain system. Overall, the data suggest a new neurocognitive framework for the study of lexicon and grammar.
- Published
- 2004
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