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  • Mapping the connectivity un...
    Moritz-Gasser, Sylvie; Herbet, Guillaume; Duffau, Hugues

    Neuropsychologia, 08/2013, Letnik: 51, Številka: 10
    Journal Article

    Accessing the meaning of words, objects, people and facts is a human ability, made possible thanks to semantic processing. Although studies concerning its cortical organization are proficient, the subcortical connectivity underlying this semantic network received less attention. We used intraoperative direct electrostimulation, which mimics a transient virtual lesion during brain surgery for glioma in eight awaken patients, to map the anatomical white matter substrate subserving the semantic system. Patients performed a picture naming task and a non-verbal semantic association test during the electrical mapping. Direct electrostimulation of the inferior fronto-occipital fascicle, a poorly known ventral association pathway which runs throughout the brain, induced in all cases semantic disturbances. These transient disorders were highly reproducible, and concerned verbal as well as non-verbal output. Our results highlight for the first time the essential role of the left inferior fronto-occipital fascicle in multimodal (and not only in verbal) semantic processing. On the basis of these original findings, and in the lights of phylogenetic considerations regarding this fascicle, we suggest its possible implication in the monitoring of the human level of consciousness related to semantic memory, namely noetic consciousness. •Direct electrical stimulation of the left IFOF induces semantic disorders.•The left IFOF sub serves both verbal and non-verbal semantic processing in humans.•The left IFOF constitutes the irreplaceable ventral stream of the semantic system.•The left IFOF might be involved in the properly human “noetic consciousness”.