| Literature DB >> 25463820 |
Kristin S Budde1, Daniel S Barron2, Peter T Fox3.
Abstract
Developmental stuttering is a speech disorder most likely due to a heritable form of developmental dysmyelination impairing the function of the speech-motor system. Speech-induced brain-activation patterns in persons who stutter (PWS) are anomalous in various ways; the consistency of these aberrant patterns is a matter of ongoing debate. Here, we present a hierarchical series of coordinate-based meta-analyses addressing this issue. Two tiers of meta-analyses were performed on a 17-paper dataset (202 PWS; 167 fluent controls). Four large-scale (top-tier) meta-analyses were performed, two for each subject group (PWS and controls). These analyses robustly confirmed the regional effects previously postulated as "neural signatures of stuttering" (Brown, Ingham, Ingham, Laird, & Fox, 2005) and extended this designation to additional regions. Two smaller-scale (lower-tier) meta-analyses refined the interpretation of the large-scale analyses: (1) a between-group contrast targeting differences between PWS and controls (stuttering trait); and (2) a within-group contrast (PWS only) of stuttering with induced fluency (stuttering state).Entities:
Keywords: ALE; Activation likelihood estimation; Functional neuroimaging; Meta-analysis; Persistent developmental stuttering
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25463820 PMCID: PMC4405378 DOI: 10.1016/j.bandl.2014.10.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Lang ISSN: 0093-934X Impact factor: 2.381