Journal Article10.1038/384159A0
A new brain region for coordinating speech articulation
1.2K
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.
read more
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.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
Formant Space Reconstruction From Brain Activity in Frontal and Temporal Regions Coding for Heard Vowels.
Alessandra Cecilia Rampinini,Giacomo Handjaras,Andrea Leo,Luca Cecchetti,Monica Betta,Giovanna Marotta,Emiliano Ricciardi,Pietro Pietrini +7 more
TL;DR: Results revealed that phonological information organizes around formant structure during the perception of vowels, and call for a degree of interdependence based on acoustic information, between the frontal and temporal ends of the language network.
Longitudinal changes in functional connectivity in speech motor networks in apraxia of speech after stroke
Helena Hybbinette,Per Östberg,Ellika Schalling,Catharina Nygren DeBoussard,Jean-Christophe Plantin,Jörgen Borg,Påvel G. Lindberg +6 more
TL;DR: In this paper , a longitudinal study of patients with apraxia of speech (AOS) recovery after stroke was conducted, where the authors investigated the functional connectivity of the inferior frontal gyrus (IFG), anterior insula (aINS), and ventral premotor cortex (vPMC).
Neural Mechanisms of Speech Production and Stuttering
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss the effects of PET-MRI on MRI scans and show that the PET sensor can be used to detect the presence of cancer in the human body.
2
Vocal communication is multi-sensorimotor coordination within and between individuals.
TL;DR: Two additional capacities – rhythmic audiovisual speech and cooperative communication – are described and it is suggested that they may utilize the very same or similar circuits as those proposed for vocal learning.
Particulate Speech: The Emergence of the Phoneme from Syllable Frame Structures
Peter F. MacNeilage
- 01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this article, a pre-systematic basis for both the evolution and the development of phonemic systems of languages is proposed, based on the theory of evolution by natural selection.
References
The neural correlates of the verbal component of working memory.
TL;DR: Comparisons of distribution of cerebral blood flow in these conditions localized the phonological store to the left supramarginal gyrus whereas the subvocal rehearsal system was associated with Broca's area, the first demonstration of the normal anatomy of the components of the 'articulatory loop'.
2.3K
•Book
Motor Speech Disorders
Frederic L. Darley,Arnold E. Aronson,Joe R. Brown +2 more
- 15 May 1975
1.3K
Cardiovascular effects of human insular cortex stimulation
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.
1.2K
Motor Speech Disorders
TL;DR: The neurologist will find the chapters on principles of neurologic function and hierarchy of motor organization rather basic and many speech pathologists may find the section on motor speech examination somewhat devoid of detail.
1.2K