Abstract

To clarify the neural mechanisms of lexical access and selection of contextually appropriate meanings for ambiguous words, we investigated the spatio-temporal characteristics of neural activities during silent reading and semantic judgment of lexically ambiguous or unambiguous target words that were preceded by semantically related or unrelated words by using magnetoencephalography. The left posterior superior temporal/inferior parietal area and the left anterior middle/inferior temporal area consistently showed a clear context effect, regardless of the ambiguity: the activities for related words were weaker than those for unrelated words. The activities in the left inferior frontal cortex, in contrast, were influenced by ambiguities. From ∼200 to 300 ms, the activities in the left anterior inferior frontal cortex (aIFC) were stronger for ambiguous words than for unambiguous words, regardless of context. The stronger activities in the left aIFC, reflecting an increase in controlled semantic retrieval, indicate that multiple meanings for lexically ambiguous words are accessed irrespective of context. At ∼400 ms, the left posterior inferior frontal cortex (pIFC) showed a clear context effect for unambiguous words but not for ambiguous ones. In addition, the activation in the left pIFC was stronger for related ambiguous words than for related unambiguous ones. These results suggest that in ambiguous words, not only contextually appropriate meanings but also two or more inappropriate meanings would be semantically integrated with a context. We conclude that the left IFC plays an important role in selecting an appropriate meaning from multiple alternatives after the integration of contextual information.

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