Inferior parietal lobule and early visual areas support elicitation of individualized meanings during narrative listening

  • Satu Saalasti
  • , Jussi Alho
  • , Moshe Bar
  • , Enrico Glerean
  • , Timo Honkela
  • , Minna Kauppila
  • , Mikko Sams
  • , Iiro P. Jääskeläinen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

Introduction: When listening to a narrative, the verbal expressions translate into meanings and flow of mental imagery. However, the same narrative can be heard quite differently based on differences in listeners' previous experiences and knowledge. We capitalized on such differences to disclose brain regions that support transformation of narrative into individualized propositional meanings and associated mental imagery by analyzing brain activity associated with behaviorally assessed individual meanings elicited by a narrative. Methods: Sixteen right-handed female subjects were instructed to list words that best described what had come to their minds while listening to an eight-minute narrative during functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI). The fMRI data were analyzed by calculating voxel-wise intersubject correlation (ISC) values. We used latent semantic analysis (LSA) enhanced with Wordnet knowledge to measure semantic similarity of the produced words between subjects. Finally, we predicted the ISC with the semantic similarity using representational similarity analysis. Results: We found that semantic similarity in these word listings between subjects, estimated using LSA combined with WordNet knowledge, predicting similarities in brain hemodynamic activity. Subject pairs whose individual semantics were similar also exhibited similar brain activity in the bilateral supramarginal and angular gyrus of the inferior parietal lobe, and in the occipital pole. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate, using a novel method to measure interindividual differences in semantics, brain mechanisms giving rise to semantics and associated imagery during narrative listening. During listening to a captivating narrative, the inferior parietal lobe and early visual cortical areas seem, thus, to support elicitation of individual meanings and flow of mental imagery.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere01288
JournalBrain and Behavior
Volume9
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2019

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Authors. Brain and Behavior published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Funding

of Alfred Kordelin ‐foundation (personal grant for the first author), and Academy of Finland (grant number: 276643).

FundersFunder number
Alfred Kordelin ‐foundation
Academy of Finland276643

    Keywords

    • brain mechanisms
    • functional magnetic resonance imaging
    • interindividual differences
    • meaning
    • semantics
    • similarity

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