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Generating ‘tiger’ as an animal name or a word beginning with T: differences in brain activation.
Authors:
Mummery, C.J., Patterson, K., Hodges, J.R. & Wise, R.J.S.
Reference:
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London Series B-Biological Sciences, 263, 989-995
Year of publication:
1996
CBU number:
3471
Abstract:
Positron emission tomography was used to investigate differences in regional cerebral activity during word retrieval in response to different prompts. The contrast of semantic category fluency and initial letter fluency resulted in selective activation of left temporal regions; the reverse contrast yielded activation in left frontal regions (BA44/6). A further comparison between types of category fluency demonstrated a more anterior temporal response for natural kinds and more posterior activation for manipulable manmade objects. These results support behavioural data suggesting that category fluency is relatively more dependent on temporal-lobe regions, and initial letter fluency on frontal structures; and that categorical word retrieval is not a uniformly distributed function with the brain. This is compatible with the category-specific deficits observed after some focal lesions.