| Literature DB >> 30666767 |
Dirk-Bart den Ouden1, Svetlana Malyutina1, Alexandra Basilakos1, Leonardo Bonilha2, Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht2, Grigori Yourganov3, Argye E Hillis4, Gregory Hickok5, Chris Rorden3, Julius Fridriksson1.
Abstract
Agrammatism in aphasia is not a homogeneous syndrome, but a characterization of a nonuniform set of language behaviors in which grammatical markers and complex syntactic structures are omitted, simplified, or misinterpreted. In a sample of 71 left-hemisphere stroke survivors, syntactic processing was quantified with the Northwestern Assessment of Verbs and Sentences (NAVS). Classification analyses were used to assess the relation between NAVS performance and morphosyntactically reduced speech in picture descriptions. Voxel-based and connectivity-based lesion-symptom mapping were applied to investigate neural correlates of impaired syntactic processing. Despite a nonrandom correspondence between NAVS performance and morphosyntactic production deficits, there was variation in individual patterns of syntactic processing. Morphosyntactically reduced production was predicted by lesions to left-hemisphere inferior frontal cortex. Impaired verb argument structure production was predicted by damage to left-hemisphere posterior superior temporal and angular gyrus, as well as to a ventral pathway between temporal and frontal cortex. Damage to this pathway was also predictive of impaired sentence comprehension and production, particularly of noncanonical sentences. Although agrammatic speech production is primarily predicted by lesions to inferior frontal cortex, other aspects of syntactic processing rely rather on regional integrity in temporoparietal cortex and the ventral stream.Entities:
Keywords: agrammatism; aphasia; connectome; lesion-symptom mapping; magnetic resonance imaging; syntax
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30666767 PMCID: PMC6445708 DOI: 10.1002/hbm.24514
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Brain Mapp ISSN: 1065-9471 Impact factor: 5.038