Literature DB >> 25926458

The white matter structural network underlying human tool use and tool understanding.

Yanchao Bi1, Zaizhu Han2, Suyu Zhong1, Yujun Ma3, Gaolang Gong1, Ruiwang Huang4, Luping Song5, Yuxing Fang1, Yong He1, Alfonso Caramazza6.   

Abstract

The ability to recognize, create, and use complex tools is a milestone in human evolution. Widely distributed brain regions in parietal, frontal, and temporal cortices have been implicated in using and understanding tools, but the roles of their anatomical connections in supporting tool use and tool conceptual behaviors are unclear. Using deterministic fiber tracking in healthy participants, we first examined how 14 cortical regions that are consistently activated by tool processing are connected by white matter (WM) tracts. The relationship between the integrity of each of the 33 obtained tracts and tool processing deficits across 86 brain-damaged patients was investigated. WM tract integrity was measured with both lesion percentage (structural imaging) and mean fractional anisotropy (FA) values (diffusion imaging). Behavioral abilities were assessed by a tool use task, a range of conceptual tasks, and control tasks. We found that three left hemisphere tracts connecting frontoparietal and intrafrontal areas overlapping with left superior longitudinal fasciculus are crucial for tool use such that larger lesion and lower mean FA values on these tracts were associated with more severe tool use deficits. These tracts and five additional left hemisphere tracts connecting frontal and temporal/parietal regions, mainly overlapping with left superior longitudinal fasciculus, inferior frontooccipital fasciculus, uncinate fasciculus, and anterior thalamic radiation, are crucial for tool concept processing. Largely consistent results were also obtained using voxel-based symptom mapping analyses. Our results revealed the WM structural networks that support the use and conceptual understanding of tools, providing evidence for the anatomical skeleton of the tool knowledge network.
Copyright © 2015 the authors 0270-6474/15/356822-14$15.00/0.

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain-damaged patient; diffusion tensor imaging; structural network; tool concept; tool use; voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 25926458      PMCID: PMC6605181          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3709-14.2015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  13 in total

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8.  Brain Network for the Core Deficits of Semantic Dementia: A Neural Network Connectivity-Behavior Mapping Study.

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9.  Frontoparietal Tracts Linked to Lateralized Hand Preference and Manual Specialization.

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