TY - JOUR
T1 - Neuro-physiological evidence of linguistic empathy processing in the human brain
T2 - A functional magnetic resonance imaging study
AU - Yokoyama, Satoru
AU - Yoshimoto, Kei
AU - Miyamoto, Tadao
AU - Kawashima, Ryuta
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank Dr. Jungho Kim and Dr. Shinya Uchida for their help with fMRI data acquisition. This study was supported by JST/RISTEX and JST/CREST.
PY - 2009/11
Y1 - 2009/11
N2 - Successful sentence comprehension requires not only syntactic and lexico-semantic processing, but also the processing of peripheral linguistic phenomena. However, less research attention has been focused on the latter. In order to examine whether the processing of linguistic empathy is psycho- and neuro-physiological in the human brain, we compared behavioral and brain activity data during the processing of an Ageru sentence with those of processing a Kureru sentence in Japanese, which are different from each other in terms of the processing of linguistic empathy. While we found no statistical difference in behavioral data between the two conditions but a statistically much greater activation in the left premotor area for the processing of the Kureru sentence than for the processing of the Ageru sentence. However, taken together with previous findings, our functional magnetic resonance imaging results suggest that the left premotor activation reflects not the processing of linguistic empathy per se, but rather the attentional shifting process of linguistic empathy in Kureru sentence comprehension.
AB - Successful sentence comprehension requires not only syntactic and lexico-semantic processing, but also the processing of peripheral linguistic phenomena. However, less research attention has been focused on the latter. In order to examine whether the processing of linguistic empathy is psycho- and neuro-physiological in the human brain, we compared behavioral and brain activity data during the processing of an Ageru sentence with those of processing a Kureru sentence in Japanese, which are different from each other in terms of the processing of linguistic empathy. While we found no statistical difference in behavioral data between the two conditions but a statistically much greater activation in the left premotor area for the processing of the Kureru sentence than for the processing of the Ageru sentence. However, taken together with previous findings, our functional magnetic resonance imaging results suggest that the left premotor activation reflects not the processing of linguistic empathy per se, but rather the attentional shifting process of linguistic empathy in Kureru sentence comprehension.
KW - Attention shift
KW - Linguistic empathy
KW - Reanalysis
KW - Sentence comprehension
KW - Sentence processing
KW - fMRI
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=69249206746&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=69249206746&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2009.07.002
DO - 10.1016/j.jneuroling.2009.07.002
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:69249206746
SN - 0911-6044
VL - 22
SP - 605
EP - 615
JO - Journal of Neurolinguistics
JF - Journal of Neurolinguistics
IS - 6
ER -