Functional Imaging of Conceptual Representations
Tarimotimi Awipi

TL;DR
This study investigates the neural basis of conceptual representations, demonstrating that the perirhinal cortex in the temporal lobe shows suppression effects correlated with behavioral priming across different perceptual modalities, supporting its role in multimodal conceptual processing.
Contribution
It provides evidence that the perirhinal cortex is involved in multimodal conceptual representations through suppression effects correlated with behavioral priming.
Findings
Suppression effects in perirhinal cortex correlate with behavioral priming.
Perirhinal cortex shows multimodal suppression effects.
Supports role of perirhinal cortex in conceptual representation.
Abstract
A concept is a mental representation that encompasses multiple aspects of an item, but what is the neurological substrate of this representation? One hypothesis states that such representations depend upon multimodal binding processes within a single region. Convergent evidence suggests that such a region may exist within the temporal lobe(see Patterson 2007). To test these hypotheses we utilized two established paradigms, behavioral priming and physiological suppression, to examine response to the repetition of concepts across perceptual modalities. Typically, examinations of the relationship between behavioral priming and suppression have queried the extent to which suppression effects in different brain regions correlate with single measures of behavioral priming. In contrast, we were interested in the extent to which suppression effects within a single brain region would correlate…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOlfactory and Sensory Function Studies · Neural and Behavioral Psychology Studies · Memory and Neural Mechanisms
