Jürgens Uwe
German Primate Centre, Kellnerweg 4, 37077 Göttingen, Germany.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev. 2002 Mar;26(2):235-58. doi: 10.1016/s0149-7634(01)00068-9.
Vocalization is a complex behaviour pattern, consisting of essentially three components: laryngeal activity, respiratory movements and supralaryngeal (articulatory) activity. The motoneurones controlling this behaviour are located in various nuclei in the pons (trigeminal motor nucleus), medulla (facial nucleus, nucl. ambiguus, hypoglossal nucleus) and ventral horn of the spinal cord (cervical, thoracic and lumbar region). Coordination of the different motoneurone pools is carried out by an extensive network comprising the ventrolateral parabrachial area, lateral pontine reticular formation, anterolateral and caudal medullary reticular formation, and the nucl. retroambiguus. This network has a direct access to the phonatory motoneurone pools and receives proprioceptive input from laryngeal, pulmonary and oral mechanoreceptors via the solitary tract nucleus and principal as well as spinal trigeminal nuclei. The motor-coordinating network needs a facilitatory input from the periaqueductal grey of the midbrain and laterally bordering tegmentum in order to be able to produce vocalizations. Voluntary control of vocalization, in contrast to completely innate vocal reactions, such as pain shrieking, needs the intactness of the forebrain. Voluntary control over the initiation and suppression of vocal utterances is carried out by the mediofrontal cortex (including anterior cingulate gyrus and supplementary as well as pre-supplementary motor area). Voluntary control over the acoustic structure of vocalizations is carried out by the motor cortex via pyramidal/corticobulbar as well as extrapyramidal pathways. The most important extrapyramidal pathway seems to be the connection motor cortex-putamen-substantia nigra-parvocellular reticular formation-phonatory motoneurones. The motor cortex depends upon a number of inputs for fulfilling its task. It needs a cerebellar input via the ventrolateral thalamus for allowing a smooth transition between consecutive vocal elements. It needs a proprioceptive input from the phonatory organs via nucl. ventralis posterior medialis thalami, somatosensory cortex and inferior parietal cortex. It needs an input from the ventral premotor and prefrontal cortex, including Broca's area, for motor planning of longer purposeful utterances. And it needs an input from the supplementary and pre-supplementary motor area which give rise to the motor commands executed by the motor cortex.
发声是一种复杂的行为模式,主要由三个部分组成:喉部活动、呼吸运动和喉上(发音)活动。控制这种行为的运动神经元位于脑桥的各个核团(三叉神经运动核)、延髓(面神经核、疑核、舌下神经核)以及脊髓腹角(颈段、胸段和腰段)。不同运动神经元池的协调由一个广泛的网络完成,该网络包括腹外侧臂旁区、脑桥外侧网状结构、延髓前外侧和尾侧网状结构以及疑后核。这个网络可以直接连接到发声运动神经元池,并通过孤束核、三叉神经主核以及脊髓三叉神经核接收来自喉部、肺部和口腔机械感受器的本体感觉输入。运动协调网络需要来自中脑导水管周围灰质和外侧毗邻被盖的促进性输入,以便能够产生发声。与完全先天的发声反应(如疼痛尖叫)相比,发声的自主控制需要前脑的完整性。对发声的起始和抑制的自主控制由内侧额叶皮质(包括前扣带回、辅助运动区和前辅助运动区)执行。对发声声学结构的自主控制由运动皮质通过锥体/皮质延髓束以及锥体外系途径执行。最重要的锥体外系途径似乎是运动皮质 - 壳核 - 黑质 - 小细胞网状结构 - 发声运动神经元的连接。运动皮质需要多种输入来完成其任务。它需要通过腹外侧丘脑接收小脑输入,以便在连续的发声元素之间实现平稳过渡。它需要通过丘脑腹后内侧核、躯体感觉皮质和顶下小叶皮质接收来自发声器官的本体感觉输入。它需要来自腹侧运动前区和前额叶皮质(包括布洛卡区)的输入,用于较长有目的发声的运动规划。并且它需要来自辅助运动区和前辅助运动区的输入,这些区域产生由运动皮质执行的运动指令。