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Semantic control refers to a set of neural and cognitive mechanisms that govern semantic processing and retrieval. Neuroimaging studies have indicated that controlled semantic processing engages the left prefrontal cortex (PFC), yet the functional role of the prefrontal activity in semantic control is poorly understood and was therefore addressed in the present study. We used a double-blind randomized controlled experiment, in which participants from three distinct groups received anodal transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) over left lateral PFC (n = 40), a control tDCS over temporoparietal cortex (n = 40), or sham stimulation (n = 41), while executing automatic and controlled semantic retrieval tasks as well as additional control tasks assessing working memory and semantic judgement. We demonstrate that anodal tDCS of the left lateral PFC improved inhibition of prepotent semantic associations but had no significant effect on retrieval of habitual associates or switching between retrieval rules. The prefrontal tDCS also enhanced working memory capacity, but this effect did not account for the improved semantic inhibition. The control temporoparietal tDCS did not affect semantic retrieval. Our findings show that semantic inhibition and switching represent distinct components of the semantic control system and indicate that the left lateral PFC is involved in a filtering process that constrains the accessible semantic representations (i.e., a proactive pre-retrieval inhibition) or suppresses already retrieved responses (i.e., a retroactive post-retrieval inhibition). The recognition of such an inhibitory process could inspire novel treatments targeting altered semantic processing.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cortex.2020.11.001 | DOI Listing |
J Cogn Dev
March 2025
Department of Communicative Sciences and Disorders, New York University, 665 Broadway, New York, New York 10012.
This research paper explores the role of speaker, listener and real-time social attention for pronoun comprehension in autistic and nonautistic children in northeast United States. We assessed the pronoun comprehension of 22 autistic children (average age of 62 months, range 46-80 months) and 22 nonautistic children (average age 44 months, range 30-57 months) matched on expressive vocabulary scores. We evaluated first- and second-person possessive pronoun comprehension ("my" and "your") using a game in which two experimenters hid stickers and provided clues to their location by providing a verbal clue (e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Psychol
August 2025
Faculty of Information Technology, Monash University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Psychology's crises (e.g., replicability, generalisability) are currently believed to derive from Questionable Research Practices (QRPs), thus scientific misconduct.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPatterns (N Y)
July 2025
Department of Methodology and Statistics, Faculty of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Utrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands.
ASReview LAB v.2 introduces an advancement in AI-assisted systematic reviewing by enabling collaborative screening with multiple experts ("a crowd of oracles") using a shared AI model. The platform supports multiple AI agents within the same project, allowing users to switch between fast general-purpose models and domain-specific, semantic, or multilingual transformer models.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Neuropsychol Adult
September 2025
Private rehabilitation practice, Patras, Greece.
Objective: Cognitive impairment is common in patients with schizophrenia and has been found to predict functioning and quality of life. Here we investigated the efficacy of a computer assisted cognitive rehabilitation intervention in patients with Schizophrenia.
Method: Twenty patients with schizophrenia were recruited.
Eur J Public Health
September 2025
Danish Health Data Authority, Copenhagen, Denmark.
European Union (EU) Member States face challenges in using health data for secondary purposes, constrained by inconsistent digital health systems and limited cross-border sharing. One aim of the European Health Data Space (EHDS) is to facilitate secondary health data use through the HealthData@EU infrastructure and Health Data Access Bodies (HDABs). This article provides recommendations essential for HDAB implementation, informed by the HealthData@EU Pilot project.
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