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. 2006 Aug 17;6:28. doi: 10.1186/1471-2377-6-28

Table 1.

Differential brain activation of words and errors: Activation elicited by correct word-retrieval was compared to semantic paraphasias (words > semantic errors) and neologisms (words > neologisms). Furthermore, we compared activation elicited by erroneous responses (before therapy) to the same stimuli that were named correctly after therapy (correct trials > former errors; all contrasts: cluster threshold p < .05, k>50, FWE-corrected; voxel threshold p < .01, uncorrected).

Hemi Regions BA Z k x y z
Words > Neologisms R Inferior frontal 47 4.74 1635 42 28 -19
45 4.51 59 19 21
Middle frontal 46 4.19 50 42 20
L Frontal (precentral) 6 4.01 499 -50 -3 47
L Superior frontal 9 4.00 466 -21 43 39
Words > Semantic Errors L Frontal (precentral) 4 3.81 995 -50 -4 44
R Inferior frontal 45 3.78 629 59 18 18
Correct Trials > Former Errors (T2> T1) R Putamen 4.31 562 30 -14 9
L Putamen 4.24 27 -9 -7
R Thalamus 3.94 9 -17 1
R Inferior frontal* 47 4.11 437 42 28 -17
Middle frontal 11 4.08 27 37 -17
Limbic (anterior cingulate) 24 3.92 9 32 1

Hemi = Hemisphere; R = right, L = left; BA = Brodman Area; k = cluster extent; x/y/z = coordinates according to Talairach and Tournoux [36], Z = z-scores of significant voxels within significant clusters are reported (p < .01, k>50, corrected).

* The right IFG activation for the contrast correct trials > former errors (42,28,-17) differs with regard to localization to that from the contrast words vs. semantic errors, while the localization of the IFG related activation of this contrast and the contrast words vs. neologisms almost match perfectly. This might be explained by the fact that the first contrast includes 7 neologisms (and 3 sematic paraphasias) that may "dominate" the activation pattern.