Abstract rule generalization for composing novel meaning recruits a frontoparietal control network
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Zheng, Xiaochen Y.; Garvert, Mona M.; den Ouden, Hanneke E. M.; Horstman, Lisa I.; Richter, David; Cools, RoshanEditorial
MIT Press
Materia
abstract rule learning compositional generalization cognitive control
Fecha
2025-10-08Referencia bibliográfica
Zheng, X. Y., Garvert, M. M., den Ouden, H. E. M., Horstman, L. I., Richter, D., & Cools, R. (2025). Abstract rule generalization for composing novel meaning recruits a frontoparietal control network. Imaging Neuroscience (Cambridge, Mass.), 3(IMAG.a.963). https://doi.org/10.1162/IMAG.a.963
Patrocinador
Dutch Research Council (NWO) (Gravitation Grant. 024.001.006; Veni Grant. VI.Veni.231C.010)Resumen
The ability to generalize previously learned knowledge to novel situations is crucial for adaptive behavior, representing
a form of cognitive flexibility that is particularly relevant in language. Humans excel at combining linguistic building
blocks to infer the meanings of novel compositional words, such as “un-reject-able-ish”. The neural mechanisms and
representations required for this ability remain unclear. To unravel these, we trained participants on a semi-artificial
language in which the meanings of compositional words could be derived from known stems and unknown affixes,
using abstract relational structure rules (e.g., “good-kla” which means “bad”, where “-kla” reverses the meaning of
the stem word “good”). According to these rules, word meaning depended on the sequential relation between the
stem and the affix (i.e., pre- vs. post-stem). During fMRI, participants performed a semantic priming task, with novel
compositional words as either sequential order congruent (e.g., “short-kla”) or incongruent primes (e.g., “kla-short”),
and real words serving as targets that were synonyms of the composed meaning of the congruent primes (e.g.,
“long”). Our results show that the compositional process engaged a broad temporoparietal network, while representations of composed word meaning were localized in a more circumscribed left-lateralized language network. Strikingly, newly composed meanings were decodable already at the time of the prime in a way that could not be accounted
for representations of the prime words themselves. Finally, we found that the composition process recruited abstract
rule representations in a bilateral frontoparietal network, in contrast to our preregistered prediction of a medial
prefrontal-hippocampal network. These results support the hypothesis that people activate a bilateral frontoparietal
circuitry for compositional inference and generalization in language.





