Title: Purpose
1Functional MRI Study Metaphor Irony Processing
in High-Functioning Autism D.L. Williams1,2 R.K.
Kana2 V.L. Cherkassky2 T. A. Keller2 N. J.
Minshew3, M.A. Just2 1Duquesne University
2Center for Cognitive Brain Imaging, Carnegie
Mellon University 3University of Pittsburgh
School of Medicine
Purpose
Results
Design
Correlation Between Brain Activation and Verbal IQ
- This functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
study investigated the neural basis of
comprehending literal, metaphoric, and ironic
meaning in adults with high-functioning autism
compared to typical control participants during a
discourse comprehension task.
- The experiment was an event-related design. Data
were collected for three conditions literal,
metaphor, and irony. 9 stories of each condition
plus 1 practice were presented. - A 24-second fixation condition was presented 4
times during the experiment to provide a baseline
measure of brain activation with which to compare
each experimental condition. - Each participant practiced the task before going
into the scanner. The practice consisted of two
stories and questions of each condition.
Behavioral Data
- Areas positively correlated with VIQ in Irony
Fixation and Metaphor Fixation contrasts for
the autism group (no such areas for the control
group).
- The participants with autism performed similarly
to the controls on the literal sentences, but had
more difficulty than the controls on
comprehension of the ironic sentences. - The autism group made reliably more errors in
answering the comprehension question when the
critical utterance was ironic (21.2 for autism
vs. 5.5 for controls). There were no significant
differences between the reaction times of the two
groups
Introduction
- Behavioral studies indicate that individuals with
autism exhibit difficulty with interpretation of
figurative language such as irony and metaphor
(Jolliffe Baron-Cohen, 1999 Happé, 1993
Ozonoff Miller, 1996). - These two language forms are experimentally
interesting because, although both are nonliteral
figurative language, only comprehension of irony
requires common ground between speaker and
addressee in the form of shared beliefs and
knowledge. - To interpret irony, the reader must recognize
that the speakers mental state differs from the
literal interpretation of the statement he makes.
This is a process that may rely on theory of
mind (Happé, 1993). - Neurally, this demands the integration of regions
associated with language processing and social
cognition.
fMRI Presentation
Functional Connectivity
- Group differences in frontal-parietal and
frontal-temporal functional connectivities in the
3 experimental conditions.
fMRI Data
Brain Activation During Processing of CUs
Method
Scanner Procedure
- Within-group brain activation in the 3
experimental conditions vs. fixation. Green
ellipses indicate right temporal activation in
autism group (but not in control group) in
literal, irony, and (to a lesser extent) metaphor
task.
Participants
- Participants were run on a 3.0T Siemens Allegra
scanner using a Circularly Polarized (CP)
transmit/receive head coil at the Brain Imaging
Research Center, University of Pittsburgh/Carnegie
Mellon University - The experimental stimuli were rear projected onto
a translucent plastic screen attached to the roof
of the scanner bore. Participants viewed the
screen through a pair of mirrors. - A sixteen slice oblique axial prescription
(approximately 25 angle) was set to maximize
brain coverage. - The onset of each trial was synchronized with the
beginning of the acquisition of the superior most
slice - Cerebral activation was measured using BOLD
contrast (Kwong et al., 1992 Ogawa et al., 1990) - An EPI pulse sequence was used where the
acquisition parameters for 16 oblique axial
slices were TR 1000 ms, TE 30 ms, flip angle
60º, 5mm thickness, 1mm gap, a 200 X 200 cm FOV,
64x64 matrix, resulting in in-plane resolution of
3.125 X 3.125 mm.
Conclusions
- As expected, participants with autism showed
significantly more errors than control
participants while comprehending the meaning of
ironic utterances. - Activation in bilateral IFG (during processing of
irony and metaphor) was positively correlated
with VIQ in the autism group but not the control
group. - The functional connectivity was consistently
lower for the group with autism, relative to the
controls, in all experimental conditions, but
most prominently when processing the utterances
involving irony. - Functional connectivity was positively correlated
with VIQ for the autism group only in the irony
task (Autism r .76 Control r .22). - Our data establish a task-dependent link between
functional connectivity and individual
differences in VIQ during processing of irony in
autism.
1Participants with autism met diagnostic criteria
on the Autism Diagnostic Interview-Revised, on
the Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule, and
by expert clinical judgment.
Experimental Paradigm
Stimuli
Brain Activation Difference Irony Literal
Data Analysis
- Irony Literal differences in activation. Both
groups show additional activation in the medial
frontal area (green ellipse). The group with
autism additionally activates left inferior
frontal and left posterior temporal areas.
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- The data were analyzed by using SPM99. Images
were corrected for slice acquisition timing,
motion-corrected, normalized to the Montreal
Neurological Institute (MNI) template, resampled
to a 2 x 2 x 2 mm voxels, and smoothed with an
8mm Gaussian kernel to decrease spatial noise. - Statistical analysis was performed on individual
and group data by using the general linear model
and Gaussian random field theory in SPM99
(Friston et al., 1995). - Group analysis were performed using a
random-effects model. Statistical maps were
superimposed on normalized T1-weighted images. - An uncorrected height threshold of p 0.0001 and
an extent threshold of six 8-mm3 voxels were used.
- Participants responded by pressing buttons in
their right or left hand depending on whether the
sentence was true or false.
For further information contact Diane L. Williams
at williamsd2139_at_duq.edu