Ozdemir Elif, Norton Andrea, Schlaug Gottfried
Music and Neuroimaging Laboratory, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center/Harvard Medical School, 330 Brookline Ave., Palmer 127, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Neuroimage. 2006 Nov 1;33(2):628-35. doi: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.07.013. Epub 2006 Sep 7.
Using a modified sparse temporal sampling fMRI technique, we examined both shared and distinct neural correlates of singing and speaking. In the experimental conditions, 10 right-handed subjects were asked to repeat intoned ("sung") and non-intoned ("spoken") bisyllabic words/phrases that were contrasted with conditions controlling for pitch ("humming") and the basic motor processes associated with vocalization ("vowel production"). Areas of activation common to all tasks included the inferior pre- and post-central gyrus, superior temporal gyrus (STG), and superior temporal sulcus (STS) bilaterally, indicating a large shared network for motor preparation and execution as well as sensory feedback/control for vocal production. The speaking more than vowel-production contrast revealed activation in the inferior frontal gyrus most likely related to motor planning and preparation, in the primary sensorimotor cortex related to motor execution, and the middle and posterior STG/STS related to sensory feedback. The singing more than speaking contrast revealed additional activation in the mid-portions of the STG (more strongly on the right than left) and the most inferior and middle portions of the primary sensorimotor cortex. Our results suggest a bihemispheric network for vocal production regardless of whether the words/phrases were intoned or spoken. Furthermore, singing more than humming ("intoned speaking") showed additional right-lateralized activation of the superior temporal gyrus, inferior central operculum, and inferior frontal gyrus which may offer an explanation for the clinical observation that patients with non-fluent aphasia due to left hemisphere lesions are able to sing the text of a song while they are unable to speak the same words.
我们运用一种改良的稀疏时间采样功能磁共振成像(fMRI)技术,研究了唱歌和说话共同的以及不同的神经关联。在实验条件下,10名右利手受试者被要求重复有语调的(“唱”)和无语调的(“说”)双音节单词/短语,并将其与控制音高的条件(“哼唱”)以及与发声相关的基本运动过程(“元音发声”)进行对比。所有任务共有的激活区域包括双侧的中央前回和中央后回下部、颞上回(STG)以及颞上沟(STS),这表明存在一个用于运动准备和执行以及发声感觉反馈/控制的大型共享网络。说比元音发声的对比显示,额下回激活,最有可能与运动规划和准备有关;初级感觉运动皮层激活,与运动执行有关;颞上回/颞上沟中部和后部激活,与感觉反馈有关。唱比说的对比显示,颞上回中部(右侧比左侧更强)以及初级感觉运动皮层最下部和中部有额外激活。我们的结果表明,无论单词/短语是有语调还是无语调,发声都存在双侧半球网络。此外,唱比哼唱(“有语调的说话”)显示颞上回、中央下盖和额下回有额外的右侧化激活,这可能为临床观察提供解释,即因左半球病变导致非流利性失语的患者能够唱出歌曲的歌词,而无法说出相同的单词。