Support our work
Decorative header background

Pronouns reactivate conceptual representations in human hippocampal neurons

Research group Roelfsema
Publication year 2024
Published in Science
Authors D E Dijksterhuis, M W Self, J K Possel, J C Peters, E C W van Straaten, S Idema, J C Baaijen, S M A van der Salm, E J Aarnoutse, N C E van Klink, P van Eijsden, S Hanslmayr, R Chelvarajah, F Roux, L D Kolibius, V Sawlani, D T Rollings, S Dehaene, P R Roelfsema

During discourse comprehension, every new word adds to an evolving representation of meaning that accumulates over consecutive sentences and constrains the next words. To minimize repetition and utterance length, languages use pronouns, like the word "she," to refer to nouns and phrases that were previously introduced. It has been suggested that language comprehension requires that pronouns activate the same neuronal representations as the nouns themselves. We recorded from individual neurons in the human hippocampus during a reading task. Cells that were selective to a particular noun were later reactivated by pronouns that refer to the cells' preferred noun. These results imply that concept cells contribute to a rapid and dynamic semantic memory network that is recruited during language comprehension.

Support our work!

The Friends Foundation facilitates groundbreaking brain research. You can help us with that.

Support our work