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2016 journal original-research Front Hum Neurosci

Decreased Cerebellar-Orbitofrontal Connectivity Correlates with Stuttering Severity: Whole-Brain Functional and Structural Connectivity Associations with Persistent Developmental Stuttering

Sitek KR, Cai S, Beal DS, Perkell JS, Guenther FH, Ghosh SS

Identifiers and access

DOI
10.3389/fnhum.2016.00190
PubMed
27199712
PMC
PMC4855981
PDF
Open-access copy →
Cited by
56

Key findings

Whole-brain functional and white-matter connectivity in persistent developmental stuttering showed increased cerebellum-thalamus and basal-ganglia-temporal connectivity but reduced perisylvian structural and functional connectivity; greater cerebellum-orbitofrontal connectivity was associated with milder stuttering, suggesting a compensatory role.

Abstract

Source: pubmed

Persistent developmental stuttering is characterized by speech production disfluency and affects 1% of adults. The degree of impairment varies widely across individuals and the neural mechanisms underlying the disorder and this variability remain poorly understood. Here we elucidate compensatory mechanisms related to this variability in impairment using whole-brain functional and white matter connectivity analyses in persistent developmental stuttering. We found that people who stutter had stronger functional connectivity between cerebellum and thalamus than people with fluent speech, while stutterers with the least severe symptoms had greater functional connectivity between left cerebellum and left orbitofrontal cortex (OFC). Additionally, people who stutter had decreased functional and white matter connectivity among the perisylvian auditory, motor, and speech planning regions compared to typical speakers, but greater functional connectivity between the right basal ganglia and bilateral temporal auditory regions. Structurally, disfluency ratings were negatively correlated with white matter connections to left perisylvian regions and to the brain stem. Overall, we found increased connectivity among subcortical and reward network structures in people who stutter compared to controls. These connections were negatively correlated with stuttering severity, suggesting the involvement of cerebellum and OFC may underlie successful compensatory mechanisms by more fluent stutterers.

Topics

  • speech-voice-biomarkers
  • connectomics-circuits

Lab authors

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