Title of article :
The processing of actions and action-words in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis patients
Author/Authors :
Gianluca Papeo، نويسنده , , Liuba and Cecchetto، نويسنده , , Cinzia and Mazzon، نويسنده , , Giulia and Granello، نويسنده , , Giulia and Cattaruzza، نويسنده , , Tatiana and Verriello، نويسنده , , Lorenzo and Eleopra، نويسنده , , Roberto and Rumiati، نويسنده , , Raffaella I. Rumiati، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2015
Abstract :
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a neurodegenerative disease with prime consequences on the motor function and concomitant cognitive changes, most frequently in the domain of executive functions. Moreover, poorer performance with action-verbs versus object-nouns has been reported in ALS patients, raising the hypothesis that the motor dysfunction deteriorates the semantic representation of actions. Using action-verbs and manipulable-object nouns sharing semantic relationship with the same motor representations, the verb-noun difference was assessed in a group of 21 ALS-patients with severely impaired motor behavior, and compared with a normal sampleʹs performance. ALS-group performed better on nouns than verbs, both in production (action and object naming) and comprehension (word-picture matching). This observation implies that the interpretation of the verb-noun difference in ALS cannot be accounted by the relatedness of verbs to motor representations, but has to consider the role of other semantic and/or morpho-phonological dimensions that distinctively define the two grammatical classes. Moreover, this difference in the ALS-group was not greater than the noun-verb difference in the normal sample. The mental representation of actions also involves an executive-control component to organize, in logical/temporal order, the individual motor events (or sub-goals) that form a purposeful action. We assessed this ability with action sequencing tasks, requiring participants to re-construct a purposeful action from the scrambled presentation of its constitutive motor events, shown in the form of photographs or short sentences. In those tasks, ALS-groupʹs performance was significantly poorer than controlsʹ. Thus, the executive dysfunction manifested in the sequencing deficit –but not the selective verb deficit– appears as a consistent feature of the cognitive profile associated with ALS. We suggest that ALS can offer a valuable model to study the relationship between (frontal) motor centers and the executive-control machinery housed in the frontal brain, and the implications of executive dysfunctions in tasks such as action processing.
Keywords :
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis , Action processing , Noun-verb dissociations , Action sequencing , Dysexecutive syndrome