Department of Neuroscience, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, CA, United States.
Brain Cogn. 2010 Apr;72(3):423-9. doi: 10.1016/j.bandc.2009.12.003. Epub 2010 Jan 20.
Modern cognitive neuroscientific theories and empirical evidence suggest that brain structures involved in movement may be related to action-related semantic knowledge. To test this hypothesis, we examined the naming of environmental sounds in patients with corticobasal degeneration (CBD) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), two neurodegenerative diseases associated with cognitive and motor deficits. Subjects were presented with 56 environmental sounds: 28 sounds were of objects that required manipulation when producing the sound, and 28 sounds were of objects that required no manipulation. Subjects were asked to provide the name of the object that produced the sound and also complete a sound-picture matching condition. Subjects included 33 individuals from four groups: CBD/PSP, Alzheimer disease, frontotemporal dementia, and normal controls. We hypothesized that CBD/PSP patients would exhibit impaired naming performance compared with controls, but the impairment would be most apparent when naming sounds associated with actions. We also explored neural correlates of naming environmental sounds using voxel-based morphometry (VBM) of brain MRI. As expected, CBD/PSP patients scored lower on environmental sounds naming (p<0.007) compared with the controls. In particular, the CBD/PSP patients scored the lowest when naming sounds of manipulable objects (p<0.05), but did not show deficits in naming sounds of non-manipulable objects. VBM analysis across all groups showed that performance in naming sounds of manipulable objects correlated with atrophy in the left pre-motor region, extending from area six to the middle and superior frontal gyrus. These results indicate an association between impairment in the retrieval of action-related names and the motor system, and suggest that difficulty in naming manipulable sounds may be related to atrophy in the pre-motor cortex. Our results support the hypothesis that retrieval of action-related semantic knowledge involves motor regions in the brain.
现代认知神经科学理论和实证证据表明,与运动相关的大脑结构可能与与动作相关的语义知识有关。为了检验这一假设,我们检查了皮质基底节变性(CBD)和进行性核上性麻痹(PSP)患者的环境声音命名,这两种神经退行性疾病与认知和运动缺陷有关。向受试者呈现 56 种环境声音:28 种声音是产生声音时需要操作的物体的声音,28 种声音是不需要操作的物体的声音。要求受试者提供产生声音的物体的名称,并完成声音-图片匹配条件。受试者包括四个组的 33 个人:CBD/PSP、阿尔茨海默病、额颞叶痴呆和正常对照组。我们假设 CBD/PSP 患者的命名表现会比对照组差,但在命名与动作相关的声音时,损伤会更明显。我们还使用脑 MRI 的基于体素的形态测量学(VBM)探索了命名环境声音的神经相关性。正如预期的那样,与对照组相比,CBD/PSP 患者在环境声音命名方面的得分较低(p<0.007)。特别是,CBD/PSP 患者在命名可操作物体的声音时得分最低(p<0.05),但在命名不可操作物体的声音时没有缺陷。所有组的 VBM 分析均显示,命名可操作物体的声音的表现与左运动前区域的萎缩相关,从区域 6 延伸到中额和上额回。这些结果表明,与动作相关的名称检索障碍与运动系统之间存在关联,并表明命名可操作声音的困难可能与运动前皮质的萎缩有关。我们的结果支持这样一种假设,即与动作相关的语义知识的检索涉及大脑中的运动区域。