| Literature DB >> 33011518 |
Petra V Viher1, Ahmed Abdulkadir2, Peter Savadijev3, Katharina Stegmayer4, Marek Kubicki5, Nikos Makris6, Sarina Karmacharya7, Andrea Federspiel4, Stephan Bohlhalter8, Tim Vanbellingen9, René Müri10, Roland Wiest11, Werner Strik4, Sebastian Walther4.
Abstract
Hand gestures are an integral part of social interactions and communication. Several imaging studies in healthy subjects and lesion studies in patients with apraxia suggest the praxis network for gesture production, involving mainly left inferior frontal, posterior parietal and temporal regions. However, little is known about the structural connectivity underlying gesture production. We recruited 41 healthy participants and 39 patients with schizophrenia. All participants performed a gesture production test, the Test of Upper Limb Apraxia, and underwent diffusion tensor imaging. We hypothesized that gesture production is associated with structural network connectivity as well as with tract integrity. We defined the praxis network as an undirected graph comprised of 13 bilateral regions of interest and derived measures of local and global structural connectivity and tract integrity from Finsler geometry. We found an association of gesture deficit with reduced global and local efficiency of the praxis network. Furthermore, reduced tract integrity, for example in the superior longitudinal fascicle, arcuate fascicle or corpus callosum were related to gesture deficits. Our findings contribute to the understanding of structural correlates of gesture production as they first present diffusion tensor imaging data in a combined sample of healthy subjects and a patient cohort with gestural deficits.Entities:
Keywords: Diffusion weighted MRI; Gesture; Nonverbal communication; Structural connectivity
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33011518 DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2020.05.023
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cortex ISSN: 0010-9452 Impact factor: 4.027