Argument Structure and Morphological Factors in Noun and Verb Processing: An fMRI Study

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Abstract

In a functional MRI (fMRI) study, we have investigated the grammatical categories of object noun, event noun and verb in order to assess the cortical regions of activation supporting their processing. Twelve Italian healthy participants performed a lexical decision task. They had to decide whether a string was an Italian word or not. Words could be objects like medaglia (medal), or events like the noun pianto (cry); or the verb dormire (to sleep). Noun and verb comparison shows differences in regions of activation in the left Inferior Frontal cortex and in the extent of the same areas. We have found specific areas of activation for object noun, and similarities in the pattern of activation for event noun and verb. The activations induced by pseudowords highly resembled the areas activated by the corresponding word category. The implications of the results are discussed in light of the recent debate on the role of grammatical category in the brain. © 2012 Garbin et al.

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Garbin, G., Collina, S., & Tabossi, P. (2012). Argument Structure and Morphological Factors in Noun and Verb Processing: An fMRI Study. PLoS ONE, 7(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0045091

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