Creutzfeldt O, Ojemann G, Lettich E
Department of Neurobiology, Max-Planck-Institute for Biophysical Chemistry, Göttingen-Nikolausberg, Federal Republic of Germany.
Exp Brain Res. 1989;77(3):451-75. doi: 10.1007/BF00249600.
Single and multiple unit neuronal activity was recorded from the cortex of the lateral temporal lobe in conscious humans during open brain surgery for the treatment of epilepsy. Recordings were obtained from the right and left superior, middle and inferior temporal gyrus of 34 patients (41 recording sites). Recordings were restricted to regions to be resected during subsequent surgery. This excluded recordings from language areas proper. Neuronal responses to words and sentences presented over a loudspeaker and during free conversation were recorded. No significant differences between the right and left hemisphere were obvious. All neurons in the superior temporal gyrus responded to various aspects of spoken language with temporally well defined activation/inhibition patterns, but not or only little to non-linguistic noises or tones. Excitatory responses were typically short or prolonged (up to several hundred ms) bursts of discharges at rates above 20/sec, reaching peak rates of 50-100/s. Such responses could be specifically related to certain combinations of consonants suggesting a function in categorization, they could depend on word length, could differentiate between polysyllabic and compound words of the same length or could be unspecifically related to language as such. No formant specific responses were found, but the prolonged excitations across syllables suggest that consonant/vowel combinations may play a role for some activation patterns. Responses of some neurons (or neuronal populations) depended on the attention paid to the words and sentences, or the task connected with them (repeat words, speech addressed to the patient demanding something). Neurons in the middle and inferior temporal gyrus were only little affected by listening to single words or sentences, but some were unspecifically activated by words or while listening to sentences. Excitatory responses varied within a limited range of discharge rates usually below 5-10/s. Phonetic distortion of spoken language could reduce responses in superior temporal gyrus neurons, but also the slight changes in discharge rate of middle temporal neurons could be absent during distorted and uncomprehensible speech sounds. We conclude that superior temporal gyrus neuron responses reflect some general phonetic but not semantic aspects of spoken language. Middle and inferior temporal gyrus neurons do not signal phonetic aspects of language, but may be involved in understanding language under certain conditions.
在治疗癫痫的开颅手术过程中,对清醒人类颞叶外侧皮质的单单位和多单位神经元活动进行了记录。记录取自34例患者(41个记录位点)的左右颞上回、颞中回和颞下回。记录仅限于后续手术中要切除的区域。这排除了来自真正语言区域的记录。记录了神经元对通过扬声器呈现的单词和句子以及自由对话期间的反应。左右半球之间没有明显的显著差异。颞上回中的所有神经元对口语的各个方面都有反应,具有时间上明确的激活/抑制模式,但对非语言噪声或音调没有反应或仅有微弱反应。兴奋性反应通常是短时间或长时间(长达数百毫秒)的放电爆发,频率高于20次/秒,峰值频率达到50 - 100次/秒。这种反应可能与某些辅音组合有特定关系,表明在分类中起作用,可能取决于单词长度,能够区分相同长度的多音节词和复合词,或者可能与语言本身没有特定关系。未发现共振峰特异性反应,但跨音节的长时间兴奋表明辅音/元音组合可能对某些激活模式起作用。一些神经元(或神经元群体)的反应取决于对单词和句子的关注程度,或与它们相关的任务(重复单词、对患者说话要求做某事)。颞中回和颞下回中的神经元受单个单词或句子聆听的影响很小,但有些神经元在听到单词或听句子时会非特异性激活。兴奋性反应在通常低于5 - 10次/秒的有限放电频率范围内变化。口语的语音失真会降低颞上回神经元的反应,但在失真且难以理解的语音中,颞中回神经元放电率的轻微变化也可能不存在。我们得出结论,颞上回神经元反应反映了口语的一些一般语音而非语义方面。颞中回和颞下回神经元不发出语言语音方面的信号,但在某些情况下可能参与语言理解。