Department of Biological and Medical Psychology, University of Bergen, N-5020 Bergen, Norway.
Division of Psychiatry, Haukeland University Hospital, 5053 Bergen, Norway.
Wiley Interdiscip Rev Cogn Sci. 2011 Sep;2(5):461-478. doi: 10.1002/wcs.122. Epub 2010 Oct 19.
A series of studies using functional and structural magnetic resonance imaging, including diffusion tensor imaging measures also, to elucidate the aspects of hemispheric asymmetry are reviewed. It is suggested that laterality evolved as a response to the demands of language and the need for air-based communication which may have necessitated a division of labor between the hemispheres in order to avoid having duplicate copies in both the hemispheres that would increase processing redundancy. This would have put pressure on brain structures related to the evolution of language and speech, such as the left peri-Sylvian region. MRI data are provided showing structural and functional asymmetry in this region of the brain and how fibers connecting the right and left peri-Sylvian regions pass through the corpus callosum. It is further suggested that the so-called Yakelovian-torque, i.e., the twisting of the brain along the longitudinal axis, with the right frontal and left occipital poles protruding beyond the corresponding left and right sides, was necessary for the expansion of the left peri-Sylvian region and the right occipito-parietal regions subserving the processing of spatial relations. Functional magnetic resonance imaging data related to sex differences for visuo-spatial processing are presented showing enhanced right-sided activation in posterior parts of the brain in both sexes, and frontal activation including Broca's area in the female group only, suggesting that males and females use different strategies when solving a cognitive task. The paper ends with a discussion of the role of the corpus callosum in laterality and the role played by structural asymmetry in understanding corresponding functional asymmetry. WIREs Cogni Sci 2011 2 461-478 DOI: 10.1002/wcs.122 For further resources related to this article, please visit the WIREs website.
我们回顾了一系列使用功能和结构磁共振成像(包括弥散张量成像测量)来阐明半球不对称性方面的研究。有人认为,侧化是对语言需求和基于空气的交流需求的一种反应,这可能需要半球之间的分工,以避免在两个半球中都有重复的副本,从而增加处理冗余。这将给与语言和言语进化相关的大脑结构带来压力,例如左侧颞上区。提供了 MRI 数据,显示了大脑这个区域的结构和功能不对称,以及连接左右颞上区的纤维如何穿过胼胝体。进一步认为,所谓的 Yakelovian-torque,即大脑沿着纵轴扭曲,右额极和左枕极突出超过相应的左右两侧,对于左颞上区的扩张和右枕顶区的扩张是必要的,这些区域负责处理空间关系。本文还介绍了与视空间处理性别差异相关的功能磁共振成像数据,结果显示两性大脑后部的右侧激活增强,而女性组仅在前额包括 Broca 区有激活,这表明男性和女性在解决认知任务时使用不同的策略。本文最后讨论了胼胝体在侧化中的作用以及结构不对称在理解相应功能不对称中的作用。