TY - JOUR
T1 - Distinguishable neurofunctional effects of task practice and item practice in picture naming
T2 - A BOLD fMRI study in healthy subjects
AU - Basso, Gianpaolo
AU - Magon, Stefano
AU - Reggiani, Francesca
AU - Capasso, Rita
AU - Monittola, Gianpiero
AU - Yang, Fu Ju
AU - Miceli, Gabriele
PY - 2013/9
Y1 - 2013/9
N2 - Practice of language tasks results in improved performance and BOLD signal changes. We distinguish changes correlated with repeated exposure to a picture naming task, from changes associated with naming specific items trained during practice.Task practice affected trained and untrained items, yielding left-sided BOLD deactivations in extrastriate, prefrontal and superior temporal areas (consistent with their putative role in perceptual priming, articulatory planning and phonological lexical retrieval, respectively). Item practice effects were restricted to trained words. There was deactivation in left posterior fusiform (supporting its role in accessing structural object representations), anterior cingulate and left insular/inferior frontal cortices (consistent with their role in processing low-frequency words). Central precuneus and posterior cingulate were hyperactivated (consistent with their putative role in episodic memory for trained items, probably due to functional connections with language areas). In healthy subjects, naming practice modifies stored linguistic representations, but mostly affects ease of access to trained words.
AB - Practice of language tasks results in improved performance and BOLD signal changes. We distinguish changes correlated with repeated exposure to a picture naming task, from changes associated with naming specific items trained during practice.Task practice affected trained and untrained items, yielding left-sided BOLD deactivations in extrastriate, prefrontal and superior temporal areas (consistent with their putative role in perceptual priming, articulatory planning and phonological lexical retrieval, respectively). Item practice effects were restricted to trained words. There was deactivation in left posterior fusiform (supporting its role in accessing structural object representations), anterior cingulate and left insular/inferior frontal cortices (consistent with their role in processing low-frequency words). Central precuneus and posterior cingulate were hyperactivated (consistent with their putative role in episodic memory for trained items, probably due to functional connections with language areas). In healthy subjects, naming practice modifies stored linguistic representations, but mostly affects ease of access to trained words.
KW - Cingulate cortex
KW - Item practice
KW - Left extrastriate cortex
KW - Left posterior fusiform cortex
KW - Left posterior-superior temporal cortex
KW - Left prefrontal cortex
KW - Naming practice protocol
KW - Picture naming
KW - Precuneus
KW - Task practice
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84881173911&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.bandl.2013.07.002
DO - 10.1016/j.bandl.2013.07.002
M3 - Article
C2 - 23933470
AN - SCOPUS:84881173911
SN - 0093-934X
VL - 126
SP - 302
EP - 313
JO - Brain and Language
JF - Brain and Language
IS - 3
ER -