“…Infering the neural correlates of a function by studying dysfunction following brain damage or inactivation, the so‐called lesion‐deficit approach (Genon, Reid, Langner, Amunts, & Eickhoff, ), has proven to be a successful strategy. In this sense, convergent data from neuropsychological studies with patients with primary progressive aphasia (Mesulam et al ., ; Wilson, Dehollain, Ferrieux, Christensen, & Teichmann, ; Wilson et al ., ); stroke‐related aphasia (Chen et al ., ; Halai et al ., ); anatomo‐electro‐clinical correlations of patterns of ictal aphasia in temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) using stereoelectroencephalography (Trebuchon et al ., ); and brain (Pobric, Jefferies, & Ralph, ), and intraoperative stimulation studies (Miozzo, Williams, McKhann, & Hamberger, ), have suggested an association of omission errors with anterior temporal lobe (ATL) dysfunction. Nonetheless, other studies have indicated that omission errors can be also related to damage to regions in the posterior temporal cortex (Antonucci, Beeson, Labiner, & Rapcsak, ; Baldo, Arévalo, Patterson, & Dronkers, ; Cloutman et al ., ; Herbet et al ., ; Trebuchon‐Da Fonseca et al ., ).…”