从单词到句子的产生:共同的大脑皮层表征,不同的时间动态。

Adam M Morgan, Orrin Devinsky, Werner K Doyle, Patricia Dugan, Daniel Friedman, Adeen Flinker
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引用次数: 0

摘要

造句是人类独有的将复杂思想转化为词串的能力。尽管这一过程非常重要,但语言生成的研究主要集中在单词上。从这些文献中获得的见解是否能推广到句子等更自然的语篇,这仍然是一个未经验证的假设。在这里,我们使用高分辨率神经外科记录(心电图)和公开的语言生成实验来研究这个问题,在实验中,患者单独(图片命名)和在句子中(场景描述)生成六个单词。我们使用机器学习模型来识别每个单词在图片命名过程中的独特大脑活动模式,并使用这些模式来解码患者在造句时正在处理哪些单词。在感觉运动皮层中,这一过程预测了每个名词在句子中的表达顺序,证实了单词在不同任务中共享皮层表征。然而,在下额回和中额回(IFG 和 MFG),处理单词的顺序取决于句子的句法结构。句子结构与单词处理之间的这种动态相互作用揭示出,句子生成并不只是一连串的单词生成任务。我们认为,现在是时候让这一领域利用关于单词生成的大量文献来研究像句子这样更自然的语言结构了。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Decoding words during sentence production: Syntactic role encoding and structure-dependent dynamics revealed by ECoG.

Sentence production is the uniquely human ability to transform complex thoughts into strings of words. Despite the importance of this process, language production research has primarily focused on single words. However, it remains a largely untested assumption that the principles of word production generalize to more naturalistic utterances like sentences. Here, we investigate this using high-resolution neurosurgical recordings (ECoG) and an overt production experiment where patients produced six words in isolation (picture naming) and in sentences (scene description). We trained machine learning classifiers to identify the unique brain activity patterns for each word during picture naming, and used these patterns to decode which words patients were processing while they produced sentences. Our findings confirm that words share cortical representations across tasks, but reveal a division of labor within the language network. In sensorimotor cortex, words were consistently activated in the order in which they were said in the sentence. However, in inferior and middle frontal gyri (IFG and MFG), the order in which words were processed depended on the syntactic structure of the sentence. Deeper analysis of this pattern revealed a spatial code for representing a word's position in the sentence, with subjects selectively encoded in IFG and objects in MFG. Finally, we argue that the processes we observe in prefrontal cortex may impose a subtle pressure on language evolution, explaining why nearly all the world's languages position subjects before objects.

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