Groupe d'Imagerie Neurofonctionnelle, Unité Mixte de Recherche 6232, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique France, Commissariat à l'Energie Atomique, France.
J Neurosci. 2010 Oct 6;30(40):13314-8. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2593-10.2010.
We investigated the effects of familial sinistrality (FS+; presence of left-handedness in one's close relatives), manual preference strength (MPS), and head size on the hemispheric lateralization of language in right-handers. Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to map 49 individuals while listening to a story in their mother tongue. We found that individuals who had both the FS+ trait and weak MPS had no left hemisphere dominance for this lexicosyntactic task, whereas others showed a leftward functional asymmetry. In addition, the smaller the brain size, the smaller the leftward asymmetry for language, independent of FS and MPS. None of these effects were observed when the same subjects performed a spatial attention task that elicited right hemispheric functional asymmetry. These results demonstrate that the left hemisphere dominance for language in right-handers is a variable controlled, in part, by a number of specific factors, including FS, MPS, and head size.
我们研究了家族左利手(FS+;近亲中存在左撇子)、惯用手优势强度(MPS)和头围对右利手者语言半球偏侧化的影响。使用功能磁共振成像对 49 名个体进行了成像,让他们用母语听一个故事。我们发现,具有 FS+特征和较弱 MPS 的个体在进行这个词汇句法任务时没有左半球优势,而其他人则表现出左功能偏侧化。此外,无论 FS 和 MPS 如何,大脑越小,语言的左偏性越小。当同一组受试者执行空间注意任务时,不会观察到这些影响,该任务引发了右半球的功能偏侧化。这些结果表明,右利手者的语言左半球优势是一个受多种特定因素控制的变量,包括 FS、MPS 和头围。