REGIONAL MODULATION OF HIGH-RESOLUTION EVOKED-POTENTIALS DURING VERBAL AND NONVERBAL MATCHING TASKS

被引:34
作者
GEVINS, A [1 ]
CUTILLO, B [1 ]
SMITH, ME [1 ]
机构
[1] SAM TECHNOL, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 94105 USA
来源
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY | 1995年 / 94卷 / 02期
关键词
LANGUAGE; READING; PATTERN RECOGNITION; EVOKED POTENTIALS; LAPLACIAN DERIVATION; FUNCTIONAL NETWORKS;
D O I
10.1016/0013-4694(94)00261-I
中图分类号
R318 [生物医学工程];
学科分类号
0831 ;
摘要
Nine subjects performed a cued S1-S2 matching task in which two sequentially presented visual stimuli (either letter strings or non-verbal graphical patterns) were compared according to verbal (phonemic, semantic, syntactic) or non-verbal (graphic identity) criteria. The Laplacian derivation was used to spatially enhance the topography of averaged evoked potentials (EPs) recorded from 59 scalp electrodes. Several effects distinguished the non-verbal from the verbal conditions. For example, following S1 a P250 EP that reached maximum amplitude over the occipital area was larger far the non-verbal patterns, whereas word and word-like letter strings (but not unfamiliar characters) elicited an N470 in the left temporal region. In anticipation of S2, a CNV-like slow potential was enhanced over posterior regions for the non-verbal stimuli. During the matching interval following S2, a P475 peak was observed to be larger for non-verbal patterns than for letter strings over right frontal and temporal regions. Other effects distinguished the verbal conditions from one another. In particular, following S1 a left frontal P445 potential was enhanced to closed class versus open class words, and following S2 a P620 potential in the left temporal region was enhanced for phonological matching relative to semantic matching. These results suggest that processing of verbal and non-verbal stimuli depends on a network of subprocessors that are regionalized to functionally specialized cortical areas and that operate both sequentially and in parallel in order to extract and synthesize multiple forms of attribute-specific information. In contrast to neuropsychological approaches to the study of pattern recognition and reading, the fine-grain temporal resolution of EP measurements, in combination with the improved spatial resolution obtained through computation of Laplacian derivation wave forms from a large number of electrodes, permits characterization of both the regionalization of subprocesses and the subsecond dynamics of their engagement.
引用
收藏
页码:129 / 147
页数:19
相关论文
共 90 条
[1]   A NEUROPHYSIOLOGIC CORRELATE OF VISUAL SHORT-TERM-MEMORY IN HUMANS [J].
BEGLEITER, H ;
PORJESZ, B ;
WANG, W .
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1993, 87 (01) :46-53
[2]  
BOLANDER DO, 1985, INSTANT SYNONYMS ANT
[3]   ATTENTIONAL MODULATION OF NEURAL PROCESSING OF SHAPE, COLOR, AND VELOCITY IN HUMANS [J].
CORBETTA, M ;
MIEZIN, FM ;
DOBMEYER, S ;
SHULMAN, GL ;
PETERSEN, SE .
SCIENCE, 1990, 248 (4962) :1556-1559
[4]   TOPOGRAPHY OF THE N400 - BRAIN ELECTRICAL-ACTIVITY REFLECTING SEMANTIC EXPECTANCY [J].
CURRAN, T ;
TUCKER, DM ;
KUTAS, M ;
POSNER, MI .
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1993, 88 (03) :188-209
[5]   THE ANATOMY OF PHONOLOGICAL AND SEMANTIC PROCESSING IN NORMAL SUBJECTS [J].
DEMONET, JF ;
CHOLLET, F ;
RAMSAY, S ;
CARDEBAT, D ;
NESPOULOUS, JL ;
WISE, R ;
RASCOL, A ;
FRACKOWIAK, R .
BRAIN, 1992, 115 :1753-1768
[6]   MULTIPLE LATE POSITIVE POTENTIALS IN 2 VISUAL-DISCRIMINATION TASKS [J].
FRIEDMAN, D ;
VAUGHAN, HG ;
ERLENMEYERKIMLING, L .
PSYCHOPHYSIOLOGY, 1981, 18 (06) :635-649
[7]  
FUSTER JM, 1982, J NEUROSCI, V2, P361
[8]   INFEROTEMPORAL NEURONS DISTINGUISH AND RETAIN BEHAVIORALLY RELEVANT FEATURES OF VISUAL-STIMULI [J].
FUSTER, JM ;
JERVEY, JP .
SCIENCE, 1981, 212 (4497) :952-955
[9]   APPRECIATION OF ANTONYMIC CONTRASTS IN APHASIA [J].
GARDNER, H ;
SILVERMAN, J ;
WAPNER, W ;
ZURIF, E .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 1978, 6 (03) :301-317
[10]   HIGH-RESOLUTION EEG - 124-CHANNEL RECORDING, SPATIAL DEBLURRING AND MRI INTEGRATION METHODS [J].
GEVINS, A ;
LE, J ;
MARTIN, NK ;
BRICKETT, P ;
DESMOND, J ;
REUTTER, B .
ELECTROENCEPHALOGRAPHY AND CLINICAL NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 1994, 90 (05) :337-358