Journal Article10.1038/384159A0
A new brain region for coordinating speech articulation
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TL;DR: All patients with articulatory planning deficits had lesions that included a discrete region of the left precentral gyms of the insula, a cortical area beneath the frontal and temporal lobes that seems to be specialized for the motor planning of speech.
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Abstract: HUMAN speech requires complex planning and coordination of mouth and tongue movements. Certain types of brain injury can lead to a condition known as apraxia of speech, in which patients are impaired in their ability to coordinate speech movements but their ability to perceive speech sounds, including their own errors, is unaffected1,3. The brain regions involved in coordinating speech, however, remain largely unknown. In this study, brain lesions of 25 stroke patients with a disorder in the motor planning of articulatory movements were compared with lesions of 19 patients without such deficits. A robust double dissociation was found between these two groups. All patients with articulatory planning deficits had lesions that included a discrete region of the left precentral gyms of the insula, a cortical area beneath the frontal and temporal lobes. This area was completely spared in all patients without these articulation deficits. Thus this area seems to be specialized for the motor planning of speech.
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Citations
Testing hypotheses about the underlying deficit of apraxia of speech through computational neural modelling with the DIVA model.
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TL;DR: A recent behavioural experiment featuring a noise masking paradigm suggests that Apraxia of Speech (AOS) reflects a disruption of feedforward control, whereas feedback control is spared an....
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Phonological error analysis of acquired speech apraxia.
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- 01 Apr 2009
TL;DR: It is suggested that the errors present in the speech of apraxic individuals can suffer the influence of language once the most frequent errors found in the present study were different from those described in the international literature.
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TL;DR: In this paper, a 37-year-old woman who was monolingual in Korean developed Foreign Accent Syndrome (FAS) after a left basal ganglia hemorrhage and performed functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) using a picture naming task.
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Motor Speech Disorders
Frederic L. Darley,Arnold E. Aronson,Joe R. Brown +2 more
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TL;DR: This work believes this to be the first demonstration of cardiovascular changes elicitable during insular stimulation in humans, and of lateralization of such responses for a cortical site, and may be of relevance in predicting the autonomie effects of stroke in humans and in the explanation of sudden unexpected epileptic death.
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