| Literature DB >> 27368631 |
Abstract
The evolution of language correlates with distinct changes in the primate brain. The present article compares language-related brain regions and their white matter connectivity in the developing and mature human brain with the respective structures in the nonhuman primate brain. We will see that the functional specificity of the posterior portion of Broca's area (Brodmann area [BA 44]) and its dorsal fiber connection to the temporal cortex, shown to support the processing of structural hierarchy in humans, makes a crucial neural difference between the species. This neural circuit may thus be fundamental for the human syntactic capacity as the core of language.Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive neuroscience; Implicit sequence and artificial grammar learning; Language comprehension
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27368631 PMCID: PMC5325853 DOI: 10.3758/s13423-016-1090-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Psychon Bull Rev ISSN: 1069-9384
Fig. 1Artificial grammar used in monkey study. Artificial grammar used in the monkey study by Fitch and Hauser (2004). a Structure of sequences. b Category A syllables and Category B syllables used in the sequences as well as examples of an (AB)n sequence (left panel) and an AnBn sequence (right panel). Category A syllables were produced by a female speaker, Category B syllables by a male speaker. Category membership was thus coded by the pitch of voice. Adapted from “Computational Constraints on Syntactic Processing in a Nonhuman Primate,” by W. T. Fitch and M. D. Hauser, 2004, Science, 303(5656), pp. 377–380. Copyright 2004 by the American Association for the Advancement of Science
Fig. 2Fiber connections from functional activation seeds. Tractograms for two brain regions: Broca’s area and frontal operculum (FOP). Seed regions were taken from functional on processing (AB)n sequences activating the FOP and AnBn sequences activating Broca’s area. Three-dimensional rendering of the distribution of the connectivity values of two start regions with all voxels in the brain volume (blue, tractograms from Broca’s area; green, tractograms from FOP). a Four representative subjects of the group processing a finite-state grammar with their individual activation maxima in the FOP (orange) in the critical contrast incorrect versus correct sequences (p > .005). For all subjects, connections to the anterior temporal lobe via a ventral pathway were detected. b Four representative subjects of the group processing a phrase structure grammar with their individual activation maxima in Broca’s area (red) in the critical contrast incorrect versus correct sequences (p > .005). For all subjects, the tractography detected connections from Broca’s area to the posterior and middle portion of the superior temporal region via a dorsal pathway. BA = Brodmann’s area, STG = superior temporal gyrus. Adapted from “The Brain Differentiates Human and Non-Human Grammars: Functional Localization and Structural Connectivity,” by A. D. Friederici, J. Bahlmann, S. Heim, R. I. Schubotz, and A. Anwander, 2006, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 103, pp. 2458–2463. Copyright 2006 by The National Academy of Sciences of the USA. (Color figure online)
Fig. 3Phylogeny and ontogeny of white matter fiber tracts. a Phylogeny. Structural connectivity results. Schematic view. Dorsal fiber tract (blue), ventral fiber tract (green). Center of gravity of human MTG projections at x ¼ ± 48 are at Montreal Neurological Institute coordinates, x ¼ –48, y ¼ –42, z ¼ –3 and x ¼ 48, y ¼ –36, z ¼ –7. CS = central sulcus, IFS = inferior frontal sulcus, IPS = intraparietal sulcus, PrCS = precentral sulcus, PS = principal sulcus, STS = superior temporal sulcus. Adapted from “The Evolution of the Arcuate Fasciculus Revealed with Comparative DTI,” by J. K. Rilling et al., 2008, Nature Neuroscience, 11(4), pp.426–428. Copyright 2008 by Nature Publishing Group. b Ontogeny. Structural connectivity results. Fiber tracking of diffusion tensor imaging data for adults and newborns for speech-relevant regions with seed in Broca’s area and seed in the precentral gyrus/premotor cortex. Two dorsal pathways are present in adults—one connecting the temporal cortex via the arcuate fasciculus and the superior longitudinal fasciculus to the inferior frontal gyrus, that is, Broca’s area (blue), and one connecting the temporal cortex to the precentral gyrus, that is, premotor cortex (purple). In newborns, only the pathway to the precentral gyrus can be detected. The ventral pathway connecting the ventral inferior frontal gyrus via the extreme capsule to the temporal cortex (green) is present in adults and newborns. Adapted from “The Neural Language Networks at Birth,” by D. Perani et al., 2011, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108, pp. 16056–16061. Copyright 2011 by the authors and The National Academy of Sciences of the USA