Segawa Jennifer A, Tourville Jason A, Beal Deryk S, Guenther Frank H
Boston University.
J Cogn Neurosci. 2015 Apr;27(4):819-31. doi: 10.1162/jocn_a_00737. Epub 2014 Oct 14.
Speech is perhaps the most sophisticated example of a species-wide movement capability in the animal kingdom, requiring split-second sequencing of approximately 100 muscles in the respiratory, laryngeal, and oral movement systems. Despite the unique role speech plays in human interaction and the debilitating impact of its disruption, little is known about the neural mechanisms underlying speech motor learning. Here, we studied the behavioral and neural correlates of learning new speech motor sequences. Participants repeatedly produced novel, meaningless syllables comprising illegal consonant clusters (e.g., GVAZF) over 2 days of practice. Following practice, participants produced the sequences with fewer errors and shorter durations, indicative of motor learning. Using fMRI, we compared brain activity during production of the learned illegal sequences and novel illegal sequences. Greater activity was noted during production of novel sequences in brain regions linked to non-speech motor sequence learning, including the BG and pre-SMA. Activity during novel sequence production was also greater in brain regions associated with learning and maintaining speech motor programs, including lateral premotor cortex, frontal operculum, and posterior superior temporal cortex. Measures of learning success correlated positively with activity in left frontal operculum and white matter integrity under left posterior superior temporal sulcus. These findings indicate speech motor sequence learning relies not only on brain areas involved generally in motor sequencing learning but also those associated with feedback-based speech motor learning. Furthermore, learning success is modulated by the integrity of structural connectivity between these motor and sensory brain regions.
言语或许是动物王国中物种范围内运动能力最复杂的例子,它需要呼吸、喉部和口腔运动系统中约100块肌肉瞬间协同运作。尽管言语在人际交流中发挥着独特作用,且言语中断会产生严重影响,但对于言语运动学习背后的神经机制,我们却知之甚少。在此,我们研究了学习新的言语运动序列时的行为和神经关联。参与者在两天的练习中反复发出由非法辅音群组成的新颖、无意义音节(如GVAZF)。练习之后,参与者发出这些序列时错误减少、时长缩短,这表明运动学习有了成效。利用功能磁共振成像,我们比较了在发出已学非法序列和新颖非法序列时的大脑活动。在与非言语运动序列学习相关的脑区,包括基底神经节和前辅助运动区,发出新颖序列时的活动更为强烈。在与学习和维持言语运动程序相关的脑区,包括外侧运动前皮层、额盖和颞上回后部,发出新颖序列时的活动也更为强烈。学习成效的指标与左侧额盖的活动以及左侧颞上沟后部白质的完整性呈正相关。这些发现表明,言语运动序列学习不仅依赖于一般参与运动序列学习的脑区,还依赖于与基于反馈的言语运动学习相关的脑区。此外,学习成效受到这些运动和感觉脑区之间结构连接完整性的调节。