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The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction

Semantic cognition, as described by the controlled semantic cognition (CSC) framework (Rogers et al., 2015, Neuropsychologia, 76, 220), involves two key components: activation of coherent, generalizable concepts within a heteromodal ‘hub’ in combination with modality‐specific features (spokes), and...

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Autores principales: Thompson, Hannah E., Almaghyuli, Azizah, Noonan, Krist A., barak, Ohr, Lambon Ralph, Matthew A., Jefferies, Elizabeth
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6001665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29314772
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jnp.12142
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author Thompson, Hannah E.
Almaghyuli, Azizah
Noonan, Krist A.
barak, Ohr
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
author_facet Thompson, Hannah E.
Almaghyuli, Azizah
Noonan, Krist A.
barak, Ohr
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
author_sort Thompson, Hannah E.
collection PubMed
description Semantic cognition, as described by the controlled semantic cognition (CSC) framework (Rogers et al., 2015, Neuropsychologia, 76, 220), involves two key components: activation of coherent, generalizable concepts within a heteromodal ‘hub’ in combination with modality‐specific features (spokes), and a constraining mechanism that manipulates and gates this knowledge to generate time‐ and task‐appropriate behaviour. Executive–semantic goal representations, largely supported by executive regions such as frontal and parietal cortex, are thought to allow the generation of non‐dominant aspects of knowledge when these are appropriate for the task or context. Semantic aphasia (SA) patients have executive–semantic deficits, and these are correlated with general executive impairment. If the CSC proposal is correct, patients with executive impairment should not only exhibit impaired semantic cognition, but should also show characteristics that align with those observed in SA. This possibility remains largely untested, as patients selected on the basis that they show executive impairment (i.e., with ‘dysexecutive syndrome’) have not been extensively tested on tasks tapping semantic control and have not been previously compared with SA cases. We explored conceptual processing in 12 patients showing symptoms consistent with dysexecutive syndrome (DYS) and 24 SA patients, using a range of multimodal semantic assessments which manipulated control demands. Patients with executive impairments, despite not being selected to show semantic impairments, nevertheless showed parallel patterns to SA cases. They showed strong effects of distractor strength, cues and miscues, and probe–target distance, plus minimal effects of word frequency on comprehension (unlike semantic dementia patients with degradation of conceptual knowledge). This supports a component process account of semantic cognition in which retrieval is shaped by control processes, and confirms that deficits in SA patients reflect difficulty controlling semantic retrieval.
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spelling pubmed-60016652018-06-21 The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction Thompson, Hannah E. Almaghyuli, Azizah Noonan, Krist A. barak, Ohr Lambon Ralph, Matthew A. Jefferies, Elizabeth J Neuropsychol Original Articles Semantic cognition, as described by the controlled semantic cognition (CSC) framework (Rogers et al., 2015, Neuropsychologia, 76, 220), involves two key components: activation of coherent, generalizable concepts within a heteromodal ‘hub’ in combination with modality‐specific features (spokes), and a constraining mechanism that manipulates and gates this knowledge to generate time‐ and task‐appropriate behaviour. Executive–semantic goal representations, largely supported by executive regions such as frontal and parietal cortex, are thought to allow the generation of non‐dominant aspects of knowledge when these are appropriate for the task or context. Semantic aphasia (SA) patients have executive–semantic deficits, and these are correlated with general executive impairment. If the CSC proposal is correct, patients with executive impairment should not only exhibit impaired semantic cognition, but should also show characteristics that align with those observed in SA. This possibility remains largely untested, as patients selected on the basis that they show executive impairment (i.e., with ‘dysexecutive syndrome’) have not been extensively tested on tasks tapping semantic control and have not been previously compared with SA cases. We explored conceptual processing in 12 patients showing symptoms consistent with dysexecutive syndrome (DYS) and 24 SA patients, using a range of multimodal semantic assessments which manipulated control demands. Patients with executive impairments, despite not being selected to show semantic impairments, nevertheless showed parallel patterns to SA cases. They showed strong effects of distractor strength, cues and miscues, and probe–target distance, plus minimal effects of word frequency on comprehension (unlike semantic dementia patients with degradation of conceptual knowledge). This supports a component process account of semantic cognition in which retrieval is shaped by control processes, and confirms that deficits in SA patients reflect difficulty controlling semantic retrieval. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2018-01-03 2018-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6001665/ /pubmed/29314772 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jnp.12142 Text en © 2018 The Authors. Journal of Neuropsychology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of British Psychological Society This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Thompson, Hannah E.
Almaghyuli, Azizah
Noonan, Krist A.
barak, Ohr
Lambon Ralph, Matthew A.
Jefferies, Elizabeth
The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title_full The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title_fullStr The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title_full_unstemmed The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title_short The contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: Convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
title_sort contribution of executive control to semantic cognition: convergent evidence from semantic aphasia and executive dysfunction
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6001665/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29314772
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jnp.12142
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