Neural correlates of temporal presentness in theprecuneus: a crosslinguistic fMRI study based on speech stimuli

Published: June 18, 2020, 9 a.m.

Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.06.17.158485v1?rss=1 Authors: Tang, L., Takahashi, T., Shimada, T., Komachi, M., Imanishi, N., Nishiyama, Y., Iida, T., Otsu, Y., Kitazawa, S. Abstract: The position of any event in time could be either present, past, or future. This temporal discrimination is vitally important in our daily conversations, but it remains elusive how the human brain distinguishes among the past, present, and future. To address this issue, we searched for neural correlates of presentness, pastness, and futurity, each of which is automatically evoked when we hear sentences such as it is raining now, it rained yesterday, or it will rain tomorrow. Here, we show that sentences that evoked presentness' activated the bilateral precuneus more strongly than those that evoked 'pastness or futurity. Interestingly, this contrast was shared across native speakers of Japanese, English, and Chinese, languages which vary considerably in their verb tense systems. The results suggest that the precuneus serves as a key region that provides the origin, the Now, to our time perception irrespective of differences in tense systems across languages. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info