| Literature DB >> 24834043 |
Thomas M H Hope1, Susan Prejawa1, 'Ōiwi Parker Jones2, Marion Oberhuber1, Mohamed L Seghier1, David W Green3, Cathy J Price1.
Abstract
This fMRI study used a single, multi-factorial, within-subjects design to dissociate multiple linguistic and non-linguistic processing areas that are all involved in repeating back heard words. The study compared: (1) auditory to visual inputs; (2) phonological to non-phonological inputs; (3) semantic to non-semantic inputs; and (4) speech production to finger-press responses. The stimuli included words (semantic and phonological inputs), pseudowords (phonological input), pictures and sounds of animals or objects (semantic input), and colored patterns and hums (non-semantic and non-phonological). The speech production tasks involved auditory repetition, reading, and naming while the finger press tasks involved one-back matching. The results from the main effects and interactions were compared to predictions from a previously reported functional anatomical model of language based on a meta-analysis of many different neuroimaging experiments. Although many findings from the current experiment replicated many of those predicted, our within-subject design also revealed novel results by providing sufficient anatomical precision to dissect several different regions within the anterior insula, pars orbitalis, anterior cingulate, SMA, and cerebellum. For example, we found one part of the pars orbitalis was involved in phonological processing and another in semantic processing. We also dissociated four different types of phonological effects in the left superior temporal sulcus (STS), left putamen, left ventral premotor cortex, and left pars orbitalis. Our findings challenge some of the commonly-held opinions on the functional anatomy of language, and resolve some previously conflicting findings about specific brain regions-and our experimental design reveals details of the word repetition process that are not well captured by current models.Entities:
Keywords: auditory word repetition; fMRI; language
Year: 2014 PMID: 24834043 PMCID: PMC4018561 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2014.00246
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1The functional anatomy of auditory word repetition, based on an anatomical model of language in Price (. Parts that are not related to processes tested in the current experiment have been excluded. (A) defines the processing functions. (B) lists the brain areas that were associated with each function in Price (2012). Abbreviated names are explained in Table 4.
(A) Task decomposition for auditory word repetition into 10 processing functions of interest (P1–P10); (B) The 10 statistical contrasts (C1–C9, with two variants of C8) used to identify regional responses to each of the 10 processing functions of interest in (A).
The dark boxes with ticks indicate the column that shows the activation condition (top row) and baseline condition (second row) used in the statistical contrast. The third row indicates the stimulus modality or task that was kept constant across the activation and baseline condition. Contrast 8 (SP > OB) is repeated twice, once with an additional tick in the first column (AUD-VIS OB) and once with a white box and cross. This was to dissociate speech production areas into those that were (A) in auditory processing areas that were likely to be associated with auditory processing in response to the participants' own voices; and (B) not in auditory processing areas and therefore more likely to be related to the motor execution of speech.
Abbreviations: Phon, Phonological inputs (words and pseudowords); Non-phon, Nonphonological inputs; Sem, Semantic inputs (words, pictures & environmental sounds); Non-sem, Non-semantic inputs; OB, One back matching task; SP, Speech production task; Both, SP and OB; Aud, Auditory stimuli; Vis, Visual stimuli; AV, Auditory & visual stimuli
(A) Brain areas that were predicted, a priori, for each of the 10 processing functions of interest (P1–P10) according to an extensive review of the literature (see Table 2 in Price, .
| P1 | Auditory processing of all input | Bilateral STG, including Heschl's gyri & plana temporale |
| P2 | Auditory phonological inputs | |
| P3 | Sublexical phonological inputs | Left pSTS (representations of familiar sounds); v-pOp, v-pM (articulatory recoding) |
| P4 | Covert articulation | Left v-pOp, d-pOp, bilateal PM, pre-SMA |
| P5 | Phonological inputs on overt speech | Not predicted but could increase demands on articulatory associations (P4) or motor responses (P8–10) |
| P6 | Semantic access/associations | Left pMTG & pITG |
| P7 | Semantic input to articulation | Left MFG |
| P8 | Motor control of overt speech | PreC, poC, CB (IV, V, VI, VIII), a-INS, PUT, thalamus |
| P9 | Auditory feedback | As for P1 |
| P10 | Domain general processing | ACC, SMA, pre-SMA, Left d-pOp/d-PM |
| C1 | Auditory processing of all input | |
| C2 | Auditory phonological inputs | |
| C3 | Sublexical phonological inputs | Left pSTS, |
| C4 | Covert articulation | |
| C5 | Phonological inputs on overt speech | |
| C6 | Semantic access/associations | |
| C7 | Semantic input to articulation | |
| C8 | Motor control of overt speech | preC, poC, CB (V,VI, VIII), a-INS, PUT-v, |
| C8&1 | Auditory feedback | |
| C9 | Domain general processing | ACC, SMA, pre-SMA, Left d-pOp/d-PM, |
Highlighted in bold font are those that were inconsistent with the predictions in Table .
Abbreviations used in the text, tables, and figures.
| ACC | Anterior cingulate gyrus | |
| ACC | Anterior cingulate sulcus | |
| aINS | Anterior Insula | |
| ANG | Angular gyrus | |
| CB | Cerebellum (lobule) | |
| CS | Central sulcus | |
| FO | Frontal operculum | |
| HG | Heschl's gyrus | |
| IFG | Inferior frontal gyrus | |
| IFS | Inferior frontal sulcus | |
| ITG | Inferior temporal gyrus | |
| MTG | Middle tempomral gyrus | |
| PM | Premotor cortex | |
| PoC | Postcentral | |
| PoCing | Posterior cingulate | |
| pOp | Pars opercularis (in IFG) | |
| pOrb | Pars orbitalis (in IFG) | |
| PrC | Precentral | PreC |
| PT | Planum temporale | |
| pTri | Pars triangularis (in IFG) | |
| PUT | Putamen | put |
| SFG | Superior frontal gyrus | |
| SMA | Supplementary motor area | |
| SMG | Supramarginal gyrus | |
| STG | Superior temporal gyrus | |
| STS | Superior temporal sulcus | |
| Tp | Temporal pole | |
| TPJ | Temporo-parietal-junction | |
| a | Anterior zone | |
| d | Dorsal | |
| g | Gyrus/gyri | |
| H | Hemisphere | |
| L | Left hemisphere | |
| m | Medial | |
| p | Posterior zone | |
| R | Right hemisphere | |
| s | Sulcus | |
| v | Ventral | |
| C | Contrast (1–9), see Table | |
A schematic representation of the 16 tasks employed in this work, associating each task with the key factors: stimulus modality (auditory vs. visual); process (semantic and/or phonological content); and response modality (SP vs. OB).
| Auditory | Word repetition | Pseudoword repetition | Sound naming | Gender naming | Word matching | Pseudoword matching | Sound matching | Gender matching |
| Visual | Word reading | Pseudoword reading | Picture naming | Color naming | Word matching | Pseudoword matching | Picture matching | Color matching |
Brain areas associated with motor execution of speech, domain general processing, or both.
| SMA | R | 3 | −12 | 72 | 6.5 | |
| ACCg | rostral | L | −6 | 12 | 30 | 7.0 |
| R | 6 | 15 | 30 | 7.6 | ||
| caudal | L | −9 | −15 | 42 | 7.7 | |
| R | 6 | −12 | 39 | 6.2 | ||
| PrCg/CS | L | −48 | −12 | 42 | Inf | |
| R | 48 | −9 | 39 | Inf | ||
| L | −18 | −30 | 54 | Inf | ||
| R | 18 | −27 | 60 | Inf | ||
| PrCg-v | L | −57 | −9 | 21 | Inf | |
| R | 60 | −6 | 18 | Inf | ||
| vPM | L | −57 | 3 | 21 | 6.6 | |
| R | 57 | 3 | 21 | Inf | ||
| pINS-d | L | −33 | −12 | 18 | Inf | |
| R | 33 | −12 | 18 | Inf | ||
| aINS-d | L | −33 | 6 | 12 | 6.3 | |
| R | 36 | 9 | 9 | 6.8 | ||
| aINS-v | L | −30 | 9 | −9 | 7.6 | |
| L | −36 | 9 | −3 | 6.9 | ||
| L | −30 | −6 | −9 | Inf | ||
| R | 30 | 12 | −9 | 7.7 | ||
| R | 33 | 9 | 0 | 7.1 | ||
| R | 42 | 9 | −3 | 6.5 | ||
| R | 30 | −9 | −6 | Inf | ||
| PUT post | L | −27 | −12 | −6 | Inf | |
| R | −27 | −12 | −6 | Inf | ||
| PUT ant | L | −21 | 6 | 3 | Inf | |
| R | 21 | 6 | 3 | Inf | ||
| Amygdala | L | −27 | −3 | −15 | Inf | |
| R | 30 | −3 | −15 | Inf | ||
| TP/aSTG | L | −42 | 15 | −27 | 7.2 | |
| L | −51 | 12 | −18 | 5.8 | ||
| R | 39 | 15 | −30 | 7.5 | ||
| R | 48 | 12 | −24 | 7.0 | ||
| pTri | L | −48 | 39 | 9 | 6.5 | |
| L | −48 | 30 | 6 | 5.7 | ||
| R | 51 | 39 | 9 | 7.6 | ||
| R | 45 | 30 | 3 | 7.0 | ||
| CB (V/VI) | L | −12 | −66 | −12 | Inf | |
| Paravermal | R | 15 | −60 | −18 | Inf | |
| R | 15 | −72 | −15 | Inf | ||
| CB (VIIIA) | L | −24 | −69 | −42 | 5.3 | |
| Paravermal | R | 12 | −63 | −39 | 7.8 | |
| R | 9 | −66 | −36 | 7.6 | ||
| Pre-SMA | 3 | 3 | 63 | Inf | ||
| 3 | 12 | 57 | 6.3 | |||
| ACCs | L | −6 | 12 | 39 | 6.1 | |
| R | 9 | 15 | 36 | 6.8 | ||
| R | 3 | 12 | 42 | 5.9 | ||
| PrCg-d | L | −48 | −9 | 51 | Inf | |
| R | 51 | 0 | 45 | Inf | ||
| PM-v | L | −60 | 3 | 24 | Inf | |
| aINS-d/FO | L | −36 | 12 | 6 | 5.4 | |
| L | −39 | 27 | 0 | 5.1 | ||
| R | 36 | 18 | 6 | 5.3 | ||
| R | 39 | 24 | 6 | 5.3 | ||
| CB (VI) | L | −27 | −60 | −24 | Inf | |
| Lateral | L | −36 | −60 | −24 | 6.6 | |
| R | 24 | −60 | −24 | Inf | ||
| SMA | L | −6 | 0 | 54 | Inf | |
| R | 3 | 3 | 51 | Inf | ||
| SMG-d | L | −45 | −39 | 42 | Inf | |
Columns 1–3 in each section correspond to columns 2–4 in Table .
Figure 2Illustrations of activations related to auditory processing (in blue), phonological processing (in turquoise), semantic processing (in pink) and the motor execution of speech (in dark green) on a single sagittal brain image at . Plots show the response for each of the 16 conditions in each of the regions of interest, with the name of the brain region, the x, y, and z MNI co-ordinates of the effect and the Contrast number (e.g., C8) used to identify the effect. The order of the conditions is always the same with abbreviations defined at the bottom of the figure. The conditions of interest for each effect are highlighted in the corresponding color. Red bars on each plot are the 90% confidence intervals generated in SPM. The height of the bar is the mean effect across subjects in arbitrary units, as generated in SPM.
Figure 6As in Figures .
The effects of phonological vs. semantic inputs. Separate tables indicate the location and significance of activation for: (A) stimuli with phonological vs. non-phonological content; (B) stimuli with semantic vs. non-semantic content; and (C) auditory stimuli with semantic content.
| C3 | aSTS | L | −54 | −18 | −6 | 5.1* | 3.7∧ | 3.9 | ns | ns |
| C3 | pSTS | L | −51 | −39 | 3 | 4.4∧ | 4.0∧ | 2.6 | ns | ns |
| C3 | PUT post | L | −27 | −9 | −3 | 5.4* | 3.1 | 4.9* | ns | ns |
| C3/5 | PUT ant | L | −21 | 6 | 3 | 3.5∧ | ns | 4.7* | ns | 3.6 |
| C3/5 | vPM | L | −54 | 0 | 30 | 4.3∧ | ns | 5.4* | ns | 3.6 |
| C3/5 | vPM | L | −57 | 6 | 21 | 3.2∧ | ns | 4.4∧ | ns | 4.0 |
| C4 | pOrb/pTri | L | −45 | 27 | −3 | 3.8 | 3.8∧ | ns | 3.0 | ns |
| C6 | pOrb | L | −33 | 30 | −12 | 6.6* | 3.6 | 6.6 | ns | 2.6 |
| C7 | pOrb | L | −45 | 30 | −6 | 3.1 | ns | 4.4∧ | ns | 3.1 |
| C7 | pMTG | L | −51 | −60 | 6 | 4.6* | ns | 5.8* | ns | 4.1 |
| C7 | pMTG | L | −57 | −51 | 3 | 3.4 | ns | 5.8* | ns | 4.7* |
| C7 | ANG | L | −54 | −57 | 18 | 3.5 | ns | 4.4∧ | ns | 2.7 |
| C7 | Hippocampus | L | −27 | −15 | −12 | 4.4∧ | ns | 5.1* | ns | 2.8 |
| C7A | FO | L | −30 | 27 | 3 | ns | ns | 4.6* | ns | 4.5 |
| C7A | pTri | L | −48 | 33 | 12 | 5.5 | ns | 6.9* | ns | 4.8 |
| C7A | IFS | L | −39 | 24 | 21 | 5.1 | ns | 6.2* | ns | 4.1 |
| C7A | CB (VIIIA) | R | 30 | −66 | −48 | ns | ns | 5.2* | ns | 5.2 |
| C7A | CB (VIIIA) | R | 27 | −66 | −39 | 3.5 | ns | 4.6* | ns | 3.4 |
| C7A | CB (VI) | R | 9 | −72 | −21 | ns | ns | 4.8* | ns | 4.6 |
The first column (C) reports the contrast number used in Table .
Figure 3As in Figure . Effects colored yellow/orange are those related to domain general processing. Effects in red are those that show an effect of domain general processing (C9) which is enhanced during speech production (C8). The effect in light green was identified for producing speech from auditory semantic stimuli (C7A).
Figure 5As in Figures .
Figure 4As in Figures .