TY - JOUR
T1 - Differences in functional magnetic resonance imaging activation by category in a visual confrontation naming task
AU - Smith, C. D.
AU - Andersen, A. H.
AU - Kryscio, R. J.
AU - Schmitt, F. A.
AU - Kindy, M. S.
AU - Blonder, L. X.
AU - Avison, M. J.
PY - 2001
Y1 - 2001
N2 - Objective. Cortical processing involved in seemingly similar tasks may differ in important ways. The authors mapped cortical regions engaged in a commonly performed picture naming task, seeking differences by semantic category. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used during presentation of standardized line drawings in 18 healthy right-handed female participants, comparing living versus nonliving entities. During visual naming, across categories there was strong activation of left frontal (BA45/47), bilateral temporo-occipital junction (BA19), and inferior temporal regions (BA36/37). Activation of right inferior temporal cortex (BA19 and BA37) was greater during naming of living versus nonliving category items. No category differences in activation strength in the left temporal lobe were observed. The authors conclude that visual semantic operations may involve visual association cortex in the right temporal lobe in women.
AB - Objective. Cortical processing involved in seemingly similar tasks may differ in important ways. The authors mapped cortical regions engaged in a commonly performed picture naming task, seeking differences by semantic category. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used during presentation of standardized line drawings in 18 healthy right-handed female participants, comparing living versus nonliving entities. During visual naming, across categories there was strong activation of left frontal (BA45/47), bilateral temporo-occipital junction (BA19), and inferior temporal regions (BA36/37). Activation of right inferior temporal cortex (BA19 and BA37) was greater during naming of living versus nonliving category items. No category differences in activation strength in the left temporal lobe were observed. The authors conclude that visual semantic operations may involve visual association cortex in the right temporal lobe in women.
KW - Functional magnetic resonance imaging
KW - Language
KW - Naming
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U2 - 10.1111/j.1552-6569.2001.tb00028.x
DO - 10.1111/j.1552-6569.2001.tb00028.x
M3 - Article
C2 - 11296587
AN - SCOPUS:0035714292
SN - 1051-2284
VL - 11
SP - 165
EP - 170
JO - Journal of Neuroimaging
JF - Journal of Neuroimaging
IS - 2
ER -