Simonyan Kristina, Fuertinger Stefan
Department of Neurology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York; Department Otolaryngology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York
Department of Neurology, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, New York;
J Neurophysiol. 2015 Apr 1;113(7):2967-78. doi: 10.1152/jn.00964.2014. Epub 2015 Feb 11.
Speech production is one of the most complex human behaviors. Although brain activation during speaking has been well investigated, our understanding of interactions between the brain regions and neural networks remains scarce. We combined seed-based interregional correlation analysis with graph theoretical analysis of functional MRI data during the resting state and sentence production in healthy subjects to investigate the interface and topology of functional networks originating from the key brain regions controlling speech, i.e., the laryngeal/orofacial motor cortex, inferior frontal and superior temporal gyri, supplementary motor area, cingulate cortex, putamen, and thalamus. During both resting and speaking, the interactions between these networks were bilaterally distributed and centered on the sensorimotor brain regions. However, speech production preferentially recruited the inferior parietal lobule (IPL) and cerebellum into the large-scale network, suggesting the importance of these regions in facilitation of the transition from the resting state to speaking. Furthermore, the cerebellum (lobule VI) was the most prominent region showing functional influences on speech-network integration and segregation. Although networks were bilaterally distributed, interregional connectivity during speaking was stronger in the left vs. right hemisphere, which may have underlined a more homogeneous overlap between the examined networks in the left hemisphere. Among these, the laryngeal motor cortex (LMC) established a core network that fully overlapped with all other speech-related networks, determining the extent of network interactions. Our data demonstrate complex interactions of large-scale brain networks controlling speech production and point to the critical role of the LMC, IPL, and cerebellum in the formation of speech production network.
言语产生是人类最复杂的行为之一。尽管在说话过程中的大脑激活已得到充分研究,但我们对大脑区域与神经网络之间相互作用的理解仍然匮乏。我们将基于种子的区域间相关性分析与功能磁共振成像(fMRI)数据的图论分析相结合,该数据来自健康受试者在静息状态和句子产生过程中的数据,以研究源自控制言语的关键脑区(即喉/口面部运动皮层、额下回和颞上回、辅助运动区、扣带回皮层、壳核和丘脑)的功能网络的接口和拓扑结构。在静息和说话过程中,这些网络之间的相互作用都是双侧分布的,并且以感觉运动脑区为中心。然而,言语产生优先将顶下小叶(IPL)和小脑纳入大规模网络,这表明这些区域在促进从静息状态向说话状态转变中的重要性。此外,小脑(小叶VI)是对言语网络整合和分离显示功能影响最显著的区域。尽管网络是双侧分布的,但说话过程中的区域间连接在左半球比右半球更强,这可能突出了左半球中所检测网络之间更均匀的重叠。其中,喉运动皮层(LMC)建立了一个与所有其他言语相关网络完全重叠的核心网络,决定了网络相互作用的程度。我们的数据证明了控制言语产生的大规模脑网络的复杂相互作用,并指出了LMC、IPL和小脑在言语产生网络形成中的关键作用。