语义认知:语义记忆与语义控制

E. Jefferies, Xiuyi Wang
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引用次数: 3

摘要

语义处理是人类认知的一个决定性特征,不仅对语言至关重要,而且对物体识别、产生适当的动作以及在推理、计划和解决问题中使用知识的能力也至关重要。语义记忆指的是我们对世界概念性或事实性知识的储存库。这个语义知识库通常被视为包括“一般知识”,以及从多个经验中提炼出来的对象和事件的示意图表示,并从其原始空间或时间背景中独立检索。语义认知是指我们灵活地运用这些知识来产生适当的思想和行为的能力。语义认知包括至少两个相互作用的组成部分:语义知识的长期存储和语义控制过程,每一个都由不同的网络支持。概念表征是根据项目之间的语义关系来组织的,不同的理论提出了不同的关键组织原则,包括感觉与功能特征、领域特定理论、体现分布式概念和中心-辐理论,其中分布特征集成在前颞叶的异模中心内。网络中用于语义表示的活动必须经常受到控制,以确保系统生成适合当前任务或上下文的表示和推理。语义控制被认为既包括受控的检索过程,其中当自动检索不足以完成任务时,以自上而下的方式访问与目标或上下文相关的知识,也包括检索后选择,以解决同时活动表征之间的竞争。语义检索的控制由一个强烈的左偏侧脑网络支持,该网络部分与支持域一般控制的双侧脑网络重叠,但延伸到这些区域之外,包括通常与执行控制不相关的区域,包括额下回前部和颞中回后部。语义控制过程与概念表征的相互作用允许有意义的思想和行为出现,即使上下文需要将概念的非主导特征带到前台。
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Semantic Cognition: Semantic Memory and Semantic Control
Semantic processing is a defining feature of human cognition, central not only to language, but also to object recognition, the generation of appropriate actions, and the capacity to use knowledge in reasoning, planning, and problem-solving. Semantic memory refers to our repository of conceptual or factual knowledge about the world. This semantic knowledge base is typically viewed as including “general knowledge” as well as schematic representations of objects and events distilled from multiple experiences and retrieved independently from their original spatial or temporal context. Semantic cognition refers to our ability to flexibly use this knowledge to produce appropriate thoughts and behaviors. Semantic cognition includes at least two interactive components: a long-term store of semantic knowledge and semantic control processes, each supported by a different network. Conceptual representations are organized according to the semantic relationships between items, with different theories proposing different key organizational principles, including sensory versus functional features, domain-specific theory, embodied distributed concepts, and hub-and-spoke theory, in which distributed features are integrated within a heteromodal hub in the anterior temporal lobes. The activity within the network for semantic representation must often be controlled to ensure that the system generates representations and inferences that are suited to the immediate task or context. Semantic control is thought to include both controlled retrieval processes, in which knowledge relevant to the goal or context is accessed in a top-down manner when automatic retrieval is insufficient for the task, and post-retrieval selection to resolve competition between simultaneously active representations. Control of semantic retrieval is supported by a strongly left-lateralized brain network, which partially overlaps with the bilateral network that supports domain-general control, but extends beyond these sites to include regions not typically associated with executive control, including anterior inferior frontal gyrus and posterior middle temporal gyrus. The interaction of semantic control processes with conceptual representations allows meaningful thoughts and behavior to emerge, even when the context requires non-dominant features of the concept to be brought to the fore.
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