All Relations between word frequency and inferior frontal gyrus

Publication Sentence Publish Date Extraction Date Species
Jieying He, Qingfang Zhan. Direct Retrieval of Orthographic Representations in Chinese Handwritten Production: Evidence from a Dynamic Causal Modeling Study. Journal of cognitive neuroscience. 2024-05-02. PMID:38695761. word frequency modulated the ag → superior frontal gyrus connection (information flow from the orthographic lexicon to the orthographic buffer), and syllable frequency affected the ifg → mfg connection (information transmission from the semantic system to the phonological lexicon). 2024-05-02 2024-05-04 Not clear
Abraham Sánchez, Manuel Carreiras, Pedro M Paz-Alons. Word frequency and reading demands modulate brain activation in the inferior frontal gyrus. Scientific reports. vol 13. issue 1. 2023-10-11. PMID:37821488. word frequency and reading demands modulate brain activation in the inferior frontal gyrus. 2023-10-11 2023-10-15 human
Abraham Sánchez, Manuel Carreiras, Pedro M Paz-Alons. Word frequency and reading demands modulate brain activation in the inferior frontal gyrus. Scientific reports. vol 13. issue 1. 2023-10-11. PMID:37821488. overall, our results provide further support for the involvement of the inferior frontal gyrus in semantic processing during reading, as indicated by the effect of word frequency and the influence of reading demands, highlighting the role of the ventral reading network. 2023-10-11 2023-10-15 human
Abraham Sánchez, Manuel Carreiras, Pedro M Paz-Alons. Word frequency and reading demands modulate brain activation in the inferior frontal gyrus. Scientific reports. vol 13. issue 1. 2023-10-11. PMID:37821488. the results indicate that word frequency influenced the activation of the pars orbitalis and pars triangularis of the inferior frontal gyrus, but only in the semantic reading task. 2023-10-11 2023-10-15 human
Oscar Woolnough, Cristian Donos, Aidan Curtis, Patrick S Rollo, Zachary J Roccaforte, Stanislas Dehaene, Simon Fischer-Baum, Nitin Tando. A Spatiotemporal Map of Reading Aloud. The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience. 2022-05-31. PMID:35641189. word frequency is first represented in mfus and later in the inferior frontal gyrus (ifg) and inferior parietal sulcus (ips), while orthographic neighborhood sensitivity resides solely in ips. 2022-05-31 2023-08-13 Not clear
Christian Brodbeck, Alessandro Presacco, Jonathan Z Simo. Neural source dynamics of brain responses to continuous stimuli: Speech processing from acoustics to comprehension. NeuroImage. vol 172. 2018-12-11. PMID:29366698. results indicate that processes related to comprehension of continuous speech can be differentiated anatomically as well as temporally: acoustic information engaged auditory cortex at short latencies, followed by responses over the central sulcus and inferior frontal gyrus, possibly related to somatosensory/motor cortex involvement in speech perception; lexical frequency was associated with a left-lateralized response in auditory cortex and subsequent bilateral frontal activity; and semantic composition was associated with bilateral temporal and frontal brain activity. 2018-12-11 2023-08-13 human
Kristof Strijkers, Albert Costa, Friedemann Pulvermülle. The cortical dynamics of speaking: Lexical and phonological knowledge simultaneously recruit the frontal and temporal cortex within 200 ms. NeuroImage. vol 163. 2018-07-31. PMID:28943413. we demonstrate early modulations of brain activity by the lexical frequency of a word in the temporal cortex and the left inferior frontal gyrus, simultaneously with activity in the motor and the posterior superior temporal cortex reflecting articulatory-acoustic phonological features (+labial vs. +coronal) of the word-initial speech sounds (e.g., monkey vs. donkey). 2018-07-31 2023-08-13 monkey
Marion Grande, Elisabeth Meffert, Walter Huber, Katrin Amunts, Stefan Hei. Word frequency effects in the left IFG in dyslexic and normally reading children during picture naming and reading. NeuroImage. vol 57. issue 3. 2011-11-09. PMID:21609767. word frequency effects in the left ifg in dyslexic and normally reading children during picture naming and reading. 2011-11-09 2023-08-12 Not clear
Marion Grande, Elisabeth Meffert, Walter Huber, Katrin Amunts, Stefan Hei. Word frequency effects in the left IFG in dyslexic and normally reading children during picture naming and reading. NeuroImage. vol 57. issue 3. 2011-11-09. PMID:21609767. word frequency effects have been reported in numerous neuroimaging studies with typically reading adults, emphasising the role of the left inferior frontal gyrus (lifg). 2011-11-09 2023-08-12 Not clear