All Relations between semantics and broca's area

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
David Blacker, Michelle L Byrnes, Frank L Mastaglia, Gary W Thickbroo. Differential activation of frontal lobe areas by lexical and semantic language tasks: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia. vol 13. issue 1. 2006-04-25. PMID:16410203. to determine whether frontal lobe regions, including broca's area, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlpfc) and supplementary motor area (sma), are differentially activated during lexical and semantic language tasks, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging in eight healthy right-handed subjects silently performing two semantic tasks (adjective and verb generation) and a lexical retrieval task (noun recall). 2006-04-25 2023-08-12 human
David Blacker, Michelle L Byrnes, Frank L Mastaglia, Gary W Thickbroo. Differential activation of frontal lobe areas by lexical and semantic language tasks: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. Journal of clinical neuroscience : official journal of the Neurosurgical Society of Australasia. vol 13. issue 1. 2006-04-25. PMID:16410203. broca's area activation was approximately doubled during the semantic tasks compared with the lexical task (verbs vs nouns: 19.1+/-4.5 vs 8.9+/-1.6 voxels, p=0.02; adjectives vs nouns 24.4+/-7.5 vs 10.1+/-2.8 voxels, p=0.04); however, there were no significant differences in the dlfpc or sma across tasks. 2006-04-25 2023-08-12 human
Angela D Friederici, Shirley-Ann Rüschemeyer, Anja Hahne, Christian J Fiebac. The role of left inferior frontal and superior temporal cortex in sentence comprehension: localizing syntactic and semantic processes. Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991). vol 13. issue 2. 2003-03-28. PMID:12507948. processing of semantic violations relied primarily on the mid-portion of the superior temporal region bilaterally and the insular cortex bilaterally, whereas processing of syntactic violations specifically involved the anterior portion of the left superior temporal gyrus, the left posterior frontal operculum adjacent to broca's area and the putamen in the left basal ganglia. 2003-03-28 2023-08-12 human
Brigitte Röder, Oliver Stock, Helen Neville, Siegfried Bien, Frank Rösle. Brain activation modulated by the comprehension of normal and pseudo-word sentences of different processing demands: a functional magnetic resonance imaging study. NeuroImage. vol 15. issue 4. 2002-05-30. PMID:11906240. recent data from lesion and brain imaging studies have questioned the well-established assumption of a close functional-anatomic link between syntax and broca's area and semantics and wernicke's area. 2002-05-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
G Fernández, A de Greiff, J von Oertzen, M Reuber, S Lun, P Klaver, J Ruhlmann, J Reul, C E Elge. Language mapping in less than 15 minutes: real-time functional MRI during routine clinical investigation. NeuroImage. vol 14. issue 3. 2001-10-11. PMID:11506532. the semantic condition induced almost invariably left hemispheric activations in broca's area, the premotor cortex, the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, and the temporoparietal region. 2001-10-11 2023-08-12 human
R A Müller, N Kleinhans, E Courchesn. Broca's area and the discrimination of frequency transitions: a functional MRI study. Brain and language. vol 76. issue 1. 2001-06-21. PMID:11161356. our findings are consistent with a participation of broca's area in nonlinguistic processes besides its known roles in semantic, syntactic, and phonological functions. 2001-06-21 2023-08-12 human
A F Cannestra, S Y Bookheimer, N Pouratian, A O'Farrell, N Sicotte, N A Martin, D Becker, G Rubino, A W Tog. Temporal and topographical characterization of language cortices using intraoperative optical intrinsic signals. NeuroImage. vol 12. issue 1. 2000-08-30. PMID:10875901. these results may suggest more posterior phonological activation and more anterior semantic activations in broca's area, and more anterior/superior phonological activation and more posterior/inferior semantic activations in wernicke's area. 2000-08-30 2023-08-12 Not clear
W Ni, R T Constable, W E Mencl, K R Pugh, R K Fulbright, S E Shaywitz, B A Shaywitz, J C Gore, D Shankweile. An event-related neuroimaging study distinguishing form and content in sentence processing. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. vol 12. issue 1. 2000-05-18. PMID:10769310. effects of syntactic and semantic anomalies were differentiated by some nonoverlapping areas of activation: syntactic anomaly triggered significantly increased activity in and around broca's area, whereas semantic anomaly activated several other sites anteriorly and posteriorly, among them wernicke's area. 2000-05-18 2023-08-12 Not clear
M Dapretto, S Y Bookheime. Form and content: dissociating syntax and semantics in sentence comprehension. Neuron. vol 24. issue 2. 1999-12-06. PMID:10571235. our findings strongly indicate that a part of broca's area (ba 44, pars opercularis) is critically implicated in processing syntactic information, whereas the lower portion of the left inferior frontal gyrus (ba 47, pars orbitalis) is selectively involved in processing the semantic aspects of a sentence. 1999-12-06 2023-08-12 Not clear
E T Bullmore, S Rabe-Hesketh, R G Morris, S C Williams, L Gregory, J A Gray, M J Bramme. Functional magnetic resonance image analysis of a large-scale neurocognitive network. NeuroImage. vol 4. issue 1. 1997-12-02. PMID:9345494. semantic analysis systems (supramarginal and temporal gyri) were colocalized and significantly separated in the space of the second cv from the subvocal output system (broca's area). 1997-12-02 2023-08-12 human
K Stromswold, D Caplan, N Alpert, S Rauc. Localization of syntactic comprehension by positron emission tomography. Brain and language. vol 52. issue 3. 1996-07-30. PMID:8653390. rcbf was greater in broca's area (particularly in the pars opercularis) when subjects judged the semantic plausibility of syntactically more complex sentences as compared to syntactically less complex sentences. 1996-07-30 2023-08-12 human
H Kazui, H Tanabe, Y Nakagawa, M Ikeda, Y Ikejiri, J Shiraishi, S Hirano, A Kato, T Yoshimine, T Hayakaw. [Neuropsychological findings of functional cortical mapping in patients with brain tumors]. No to shinkei = Brain and nerve. vol 45. issue 7. 1993-10-25. PMID:8398384. the following neuropsychological findings were obtained; (1) stimulation of broca area (brodmann 44 and 45) did not produce anarthria (phonetic disintegration), but semantic and phonemic parahasias and word finding difficulties. 1993-10-25 2023-08-12 Not clear
D H Ingva. Serial aspects of language and speech related to prefrontal cortical activity. A selective review. Human neurobiology. vol 2. issue 3. 1984-04-26. PMID:6365859. in such states different forms of "aseriality" or "dysseriality" (i.e., a defective serial programming) of speech can be recognized, which include non-fluent forms of aphasia of the broca type, the hesitant, reduced and sometimes aprosodic speech in organic dementia and parkinson's disease, as well as the peculiar semantic and motor disturbances of speech in schizophrenia. 1984-04-26 2023-08-12 Not clear
K M Heilman, D M Tucker, E Valenstei. A case of mixed transcortical aphasia with intact naming. Brain : a journal of neurology. vol 99. issue 3. 1977-02-16. PMID:1000280. altholgh lichtheim recognized that wernicke's 'reflex arch' (primary auditory area, to wernicke's area, to broca's area, to primary motor area) was important for repetition, he recognized that other areas of the brain (for example, area of concepts or semantic area) must be important in comprehension and voluntary speech. 1977-02-16 2023-08-11 Not clear
S Melice-Ledent, G Gainotti, P Messerli, R Tisso. [Elementary logic and semantic fields in aphasia]. Revue neurologique. vol 132. issue 5. 1976-11-01. PMID:959704. a qualitative analysis shows that quantitatively identical results in the semantic aphasias of broca and wernicke are the result of phenomenological convergence. 1976-11-01 2023-08-11 Not clear