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Recursive hierarchical embedding in vision is impaired by posterior middle temporal gyrus lesions

Authors :
Martins, M.J.D.
Krause, C.
Neville, D.A.
Pino, D.
Villringer, A.
Obrig, H.
Martins, M.J.D.
Krause, C.
Neville, D.A.
Pino, D.
Villringer, A.
Obrig, H.
Source :
Brain; 3217; 3229; 0006-8950; vol. 142; ~Brain~3217~3229~~~0006-8950~~142~~
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Contains fulltext : 216123.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)<br />The generation of hierarchical structures is central to language, music and complex action. Understanding this capacity and its potential impairments requires mapping its underlying cognitive processes to the respective neuronal underpinnings. In language, left inferior frontal gyrus and left posterior temporal cortex (superior temporal sulcus/middle temporal gyrus) are considered hubs for syntactic processing. However, it is unclear whether these regions support computations specific to language or more generally support analyses of hierarchical structure. Here, we address this issue by investigating hierarchical processing in a non-linguistic task. We test the ability to represent recursive hierarchical embedding in the visual domain by contrasting a recursion task with an iteration task. The recursion task requires participants to correctly identify continuations of a hierarchy generating procedure, while the iteration task applies a serial procedure that does not generate new hierarchical levels. In a lesion-based approach, we asked 44 patients with left hemispheric chronic brain lesion to perform recursion and iteration tasks. We modelled accuracies and response times with a drift diffusion model and for each participant obtained parametric estimates for the velocity of information accumulation (drift rates) and for the amount of information accumulated before a decision (boundary separation). We then used these estimates in lesion-behaviour analyses to investigate how brain lesions affect specific aspects of recursive hierarchical embedding. We found that lesions in the posterior temporal cortex decreased drift rate in recursive hierarchical embedding, suggesting an impaired process of rule extraction from recursive structures. Moreover, lesions in inferior temporal gyrus decreased boundary separation. The latter finding does not survive conservative correction but suggests a shift in the decision criterion. As patients also participated in a grammar comprehen

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Brain; 3217; 3229; 0006-8950; vol. 142; ~Brain~3217~3229~~~0006-8950~~142~~
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1284137572
Document Type :
Electronic Resource