Title: Neuro vs. Cognitive Psychology:
1Neuro vs. Cognitive Psychology
A case study
2Outline
- What is activation?- The view from fMRI
- The logic of subtraction
- Imaging orthographic similarity
3Signs of activation
- Cellular activity in the brain is accompanied by
- Increased blood flow (and so temperature) in the
activated area - Increased oxygen uptake in the activated area
- Increased glucose use (during oxidative
metabolism) - IF we can detect changes in blood flow or oxygen
uptake or glucose metabolism or temperature, then
we can deduce where cellular activity differences
occur during any given task
4Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
- Measure blood oxygen level dependent (BOLD)
signal - - increased local CBF during activity leads to
excessive oxygenated hemoglobin (oxyhemoglobin)
in that region (Anyone know why?) - - Oxygenated and deoxygenated hemoglobin have
different magnetic properties, the latter being
magnetically charged - - We can detect two different relaxation times
T1 (spin lattice relaxation time) and T2
(spin-spin relaxation time)- it is the latter
that is used for functional imaging - T2 is induced by local magnetic field
homogeneity in the slice under current study - fMRI resolution is about 1 X 1 x 3-4 mm.
temporal resolution is several seconds for whole
brain
5Subtraction logic
- Due to Donders, 1868
- Lets say you are interested in A
- Devise a task AB, which incorporates A
- Ask subjects to do AB and B alone
- Then (AB) - B Time to do A
- i.e. Color discrimination of lights - RT to
lights Color discrimination time
6Subtraction logic
- Subtraction logic makes many assumptions, some of
which are debatable - The subtraction method necessarily or implicitly
assumes - that cognitive processing is serial
- that cognitive processing is hierarchically
organized - that cognitive processing unfolds in an
exclusively forward fashion - that structures participate in an all or nothing
fashion in a cognitive process
7Subtraction logic in fMRI
- The subtraction method necessarily or implicitly
assumes - that peak CBF or glucose uptake or oxygen use
corresponds to one single cognitive component of
the task - that the same cognitive component of a task is
always performed by the same brain region (and
thus, implicitly, that the brain is not
redundantly organized), even if that component is
shared between different tasks - that subjects perform all and only the requested
task (or that other tasks are are associated with
random or perfectly consistent activity)
8Subtraction logic
- None of the assumptions seems terribly likely,
and several fly in the face of current theory
about brain organization. - What can we do to overcome doubt? Gather
converging evidence.
9Subtraction logic
- Subtraction logic is almost always used in
imaging experiments - Recently, some have started using
auto-correlation instead, but this is not
wide-spread - The nature and purity of the subtraction is
vital to interpretation of the imaging results - For this reason, imaging results and experimental
design are intimately and necessarily yoked
10Language studies
- Language access is very fast very complex, with
multiple micro-functional constraints - Experimental psycholinguistics has identified an
over-whelming number of variables (several dozen)
with demonstrable behavioral impact on lexical
access multiple functional constraints in
play - There was a dissociation between early language
imaging and psycholinguistic understanding, with
stimuli in imaging studies failing to meet the
rigourous control demands of psycholinguistic
understanding
11Micro-functional dissection
- Since even the simplest lexical access task is a
multi-dimensional conglomeration of
functionality, the key is to use very simple
tasks, with very highly-controlled stimuli - In this way we try to trap an automatic
function of interest, well below conscious
awareness - And we pray that it is fine-grained enough to be
informative!
12ON
- J.R. Binder, K.A. McKiernan, M.E. Parsons,
C.F. Westbury, E.T. Possing, J.N. Kaufman, L.
Buchanan (in press) Neural Systems Underlying
Lexical Access During Word Recognition, Journal
of Cognitive Neuroscience.
13ON
- Colthearts Orthographic N ON The number of
words that are one-letter different from the
target word - -i.e. DOG ---gt HOG, DOE, DOT, DIG etc.
- Â Many experiments manipulating ON have found a
frequency-modulated neighborhood size effect. - Uncommon words with large ON are recognized as
words more rapidly than low-frequency words with
small neighborhoods - Â This effect disappears with common words
- This is among the bigger effects, with freq
and ON together accounting for gt 30 of variance
in behavioral measures
14(No Transcript)
15Almost all words are uncommon.
16The trap
- Task is lexical decision decide whether or not a
presented string is a word - 50 high/low ON concrete nouns nonwords (100
each in all) matched one-by-one on frequency,
length, bigram frequency, and phonological
neighborhood size, and (between wordness) on ON - the NWs are highly word-like, the two real
word sets are very similar to each other except
for the manipulated ON
17Hypotheses
- (i) Words should produce stronger activation than
word-like nonwords in many of the brain regions
previously identified in studies comparing
semantic to non-semantic tasks, and - (ii) A subset of these regions should show
stronger responses to items with many lexical
neighbors, indicating activation of pre-semantic
word codes.
18Behavioral data RTs
Psych Lab
Scanner
19Behavioral data Errors
Psych Lab
Scanner
20fMRI parameters
- GE Signa 1.5 Tesla scanner
- T1-weighted anatomical reference images 124
contiguous sagittal slices (.9375 x .9375 x 1.2
mm) - Functional imaging 19 contiguous (7 - 7.5 mm)
sagittal slice locations covering the entire
brain x 3.75 x 3.75 mm - 136 whole-brain image volumes collected from each
subject at 2-sec intervals - Each image was yoked to a behavioral decision
(event-activated fMRI), allowing separate imaging
of high/low ON x W/NW
21Words vs NWs
22Words - NWs
23Words - NWs
i.) Almost exclusively LH
24Words - NWs
ii.) Dorsal inferior medial prefrontal activity
25Semantic decision - phonological decision
26Semantic decision - phonological decision
27Words - NWs
iii.) Angular gyrus activity
28Semantic decision - phonological decision
29Transcortical sensory aphasia
- Damage to the long route between Brocas
Wernickes area - Main feature is a deficit in accessing (thinking
about or remembering) the meanings of words - - Comprehension is therefore severely impaired
- - The patient can neither read nor write and has
major difficulty in word finding -
X
Lichtheim, 1885
30Words - NWs
iv.) Extensive midline activity
31Words - NWs
iv.) Extensive midline activity
32High versus low ON
33Small ON hard - Large ON easy
34i.) Small ON activation gt Large ON activation
- We had (perhaps foolishly) hypothesized the
opposite - Although small ON is harder by evidence of RT
and error rates, high ON seems to coordinate a
wider variety of information - However Greater constraints Easier computation
- Think of 20 questions after 19 questions have
been asked
35ii.) Bilateral midline activity
- The midline is not normally associated with
lexical processing
36ii.) Bilateral midline activity
- The midline is not normally associated with
lexical processing - But we saw some in the W - NW contrasts
37ii.) Bilateral midline activity
- The midline is not normally associated with
lexical processing - But we saw some in the W - NW contrasts
- And it was mirrored in the semantic tasks
38iii.) Words gtgt NWs
- There is almost no activity for the high - low ON
condition for NWs
39iii.) Words gtgt NWs
- There is almost no activity for the high - low ON
condition for NWs - What differentiates words from NWs?
- Semantics!
- By evidence of activation, ON manipulations are
sensitive to semantics
40ON vs Semantics - phonology
41ON vs Semantics
42Semantics as a final push
- Small ON words seem to require more extensive
semantic processing - Why? To compensate for the fact that these items
are less orthographically word-like. - High ON biases the subject toward a positive
response (increases the tendency towards yes) - Relatively little semantic activation is then
needed to complete the response selection task
hence low ON - high ON looks like semantics -
phonology - This explains why low ON gt high ON, and why we
dont see the effects for NWs, which take the
same semantic processing in both ON conditions
43Why are high ON NWs slow and error-prone?
- Presumably high ON NWs are rejected more slowly
and more likely to be accepted because of their
greater resemblance to words harder to reject - However, the semantics interpretation fails no
NWs have any semantics - And we cannot explain why there are (almost) no
imagable effects of this very reliable behavioral
difference, save some puzzling midline activity
44Cognitive Neuro psychology
- We probably would not (did not) have a view that
ascribed semantic effects to ON sensitivity
without imaging Experimentation fails - However, the only evidence we have (right now) of
ON effects in NWs are robust experimental
effects Imaging fails - It is a good thing that cognitive neuropsychology
embraces both behavior and the brain
45fin.