DECODING HOW THE SOUNDS OF WORDS AND PSEUDOWORDS SIGNIFY SHAPE: AN fMRI STUDY

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DECODING HOW THE SOUNDS OF WORDS AND PSEUDOWORDS SIGNIFY SHAPE: AN fMRI STUDY

Authors

Kumar, G. V.; Lacey, S.; Nygaard, L.; Sathian, K.

Abstract

Iconicity refers to systematic links between word form and meaning. Although evidence for iconicity in natural language continues to grow, its neural basis remains unclear. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and multivariate pattern analysis (MVPA), we examined iconic shape associations of auditory real words and pseudowords. The pseudowords were matched to the real words in phonemic and phonotactic properties, while differing primarily in the absence of learned semantic representations. Participants listened to each item and judged whether it sounded rounded or pointed. Searchlight MVPA revealed significant decoding for both stimulus types. For real words, iconic shape associations were decoded above chance in regions associated with visual and haptic shape processing (left lateral occipital complex and left anterior intraparietal sulcus), visual imagery (bilateral precuneus), phonological processing (bilateral supramarginal gyri), and semantic processing (left middle frontal and right superior frontal gyri). For pseudowords, significant decoding was found in regions associated with multisensory feature organization (right posterior intraparietal sulcus) and language processing (left angular and inferior frontal gyri). Together, these findings provide evidence for neural mechanisms mediating iconic associations, with language-related areas involved for both real words and pseudowords, and visual processing for real words.

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