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2008 journal original-research J Speech Lang Hear Res

A neuroimaging study of premotor lateralization and cerebellar involvement in the production of phonemes and syllables

Ghosh SS, Tourville JA, Guenther FH

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.1044/1092-4388(2008/07-0119)
PubMed
18664692
PMC
PMC2652040
Cited by
197

Key findings

Sparse-sampling fMRI of 10 right-handed speakers producing isolated monosyllables found left-lateralised activation of ventral premotor and posterior inferior frontal cortex during single-syllable production and greater paravermal cerebellar activity for consonant-vowel syllables — supporting predictions of the DIVA speech-production model.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

PURPOSE: This study investigated the network of brain regions involved in overt production of vowels, monosyllables, and bisyllables to test hypotheses derived from the Directions Into Velocities of Articulators (DIVA) model of speech production (Guenther, Ghosh, & Tourville, 2006). The DIVA model predicts left lateralized activity in inferior frontal cortex when producing a single syllable or phoneme and increased cerebellar activity for consonant-vowel syllables compared with steady-state vowels. METHOD: Sparse sampling functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was used to collect data from 10 right-handed speakers of American English while producing isolated monosyllables (e.g., "ba," "oo"). Data were analyzed using both voxel-based and participant-specific anatomical region-of-interest-based techniques. RESULTS: Overt production of single monosyllables activated a network of brain regions, including left ventral premotor cortex, left posterior inferior frontal gyrus, bilateral supplementary motor area, sensorimotor cortex, auditory cortex, thalamus, and cerebellum. Paravermal cerebellum showed greater activity for consonant-vowel syllables compared to vowels. CONCLUSIONS: The finding of left-lateralized premotor cortex activity supports the DIVA model prediction that this area contains cell populations representing syllable motor programs without regard for semantic content. Furthermore, the superior paravermal cerebellum is more active for consonant-vowel syllables compared with vowels, perhaps due to increased timing constraints for consonant production.

Topics

  • speech-voice-biomarkers
  • connectomics-circuits

Lab authors

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