Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study

Cognitive neuroscience of language of action processing is one of the interesting issues on the cortical “seat” of word meaning and related action (Pulvermueller, 1999 Behavioral Brain Sciences 22 253–336). For example, generation of action verbs referring to various arm or leg actions (e.g., pick o...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Naoyuki Osaka, Mariko Osaka
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2012-10-01
Series:i-Perception
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1068/if611
id doaj-4c183e845ecc4c4298fe76f71aaef9e7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-4c183e845ecc4c4298fe76f71aaef9e72020-11-25T03:24:41ZengSAGE Publishingi-Perception2041-66952012-10-01310.1068/if61110.1068_if611Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI StudyNaoyuki Osaka0Mariko OsakaOsaka University, JapanCognitive neuroscience of language of action processing is one of the interesting issues on the cortical “seat” of word meaning and related action (Pulvermueller, 1999 Behavioral Brain Sciences 22 253–336). For example, generation of action verbs referring to various arm or leg actions (e.g., pick or kick) differentially activate areas along the motor strip that overlap with those areas activated by actual movement of the fingers or feet (Hauk et al., 2004 Neuron 41 301–307). Meanwhile, mimic words like onomatopoeia have the other potential to selectively and strongly stimulate specific brain regions having a specified “seat” of action meaning. In fact, mimic words highly suggestive of laughter and gaze significantly activated the extrastriate visual /premotor cortices and the frontal eye field, respectively (Osaka et al., 2003 Neuroscience Letters 340 127–130; 2009 Neuroscience Letters 461 65–68). However, the role of a mimic word related to walk on specific brain regions has not yet been investigated. The present study showed that a mimic word highly suggestive of human walking, heard by the ears with eyes closed, significantly activated the visual cortex located in extrastriate cortex and superior temporal gyrus while hearing non-sense words that did not imply walk under the same task did not activate these areas. These areas would be a critical region for generating visual images of walking and related action.https://doi.org/10.1068/if611
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Naoyuki Osaka
Mariko Osaka
spellingShingle Naoyuki Osaka
Mariko Osaka
Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
i-Perception
author_facet Naoyuki Osaka
Mariko Osaka
author_sort Naoyuki Osaka
title Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
title_short Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
title_full Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
title_fullStr Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
title_full_unstemmed Action word Related to Walk Heard by the Ears Activates Visual Cortex and Superior Temporal Gyrus: An fMRI Study
title_sort action word related to walk heard by the ears activates visual cortex and superior temporal gyrus: an fmri study
publisher SAGE Publishing
series i-Perception
issn 2041-6695
publishDate 2012-10-01
description Cognitive neuroscience of language of action processing is one of the interesting issues on the cortical “seat” of word meaning and related action (Pulvermueller, 1999 Behavioral Brain Sciences 22 253–336). For example, generation of action verbs referring to various arm or leg actions (e.g., pick or kick) differentially activate areas along the motor strip that overlap with those areas activated by actual movement of the fingers or feet (Hauk et al., 2004 Neuron 41 301–307). Meanwhile, mimic words like onomatopoeia have the other potential to selectively and strongly stimulate specific brain regions having a specified “seat” of action meaning. In fact, mimic words highly suggestive of laughter and gaze significantly activated the extrastriate visual /premotor cortices and the frontal eye field, respectively (Osaka et al., 2003 Neuroscience Letters 340 127–130; 2009 Neuroscience Letters 461 65–68). However, the role of a mimic word related to walk on specific brain regions has not yet been investigated. The present study showed that a mimic word highly suggestive of human walking, heard by the ears with eyes closed, significantly activated the visual cortex located in extrastriate cortex and superior temporal gyrus while hearing non-sense words that did not imply walk under the same task did not activate these areas. These areas would be a critical region for generating visual images of walking and related action.
url https://doi.org/10.1068/if611
work_keys_str_mv AT naoyukiosaka actionwordrelatedtowalkheardbytheearsactivatesvisualcortexandsuperiortemporalgyrusanfmristudy
AT marikoosaka actionwordrelatedtowalkheardbytheearsactivatesvisualcortexandsuperiortemporalgyrusanfmristudy
_version_ 1724600480015843328