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Neural mechanisms of embodied semantic processing in Chinese olfactory metaphors

  • Zhuofei Zhu
  • , Jiayu Huang
  • , Yanyang Huang
  • , Yue Qi
  • , Zhi Li
  • , Chao Yan
  • , Laiquan Zou*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Southern Medical University
  • Guangzhou Medical College

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

AbstractEmbodied semantics proposes that language comprehension involves sensorimotor reactivations, yet the extent of this in olfactory language remains unclear, particularly for Chinese metaphorical expressions. This study investigated the neural mechanisms of literal and metaphorical olfactory language processing in Chinese. Twenty-four native Mandarin speakers underwent fMRI scanning while silently reading sentences with literal and metaphorical olfactory meanings. Whole-brain and ROI analyses revealed that literal olfactory sentences elicited robust activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus, pars orbitalis, whereas olfactory metaphors did not. This dissociation persisted, although in attenuated form, when sentence-level familiarity was controlled. Olfactory threshold scores correlated positively with right piriform cortex activity during literal sentence processing. We also observed a posterior-to-anterior neural shift from concrete to abstract representations in the olfactory context. Finally, verb- and adjective-based olfactory metaphors appeared to rely on a shared neural system, with limited influence of grammatical class. Taken together, our results support the Embodied Abstraction Account, which emphasizes the flexible, context-dependent nature of conceptual representation, and challenge the Strong Embodiment Theory.

Original languageEnglish
Article number105721
JournalBrain and Language
Volume275
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2026

Keywords

  • Embodied semantics
  • Metaphor
  • Olfactory
  • Part of speech
  • fMRI

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