Department of Psychology, Neuroscience & Behaviour, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Speech Hearing and Phonetic Sciences, University College London, London, UK.
J Comp Neurol. 2021 Apr 1;529(5):1018-1028. doi: 10.1002/cne.24997. Epub 2020 Sep 8.
A prominent model of the origins of speech, known as the "frame/content" theory, posits that oscillatory lowering and raising of the jaw provided an evolutionary scaffold for the development of syllable structure in speech. Because such oscillations are nonvocal in most nonhuman primates, the evolution of speech required the addition of vocalization onto this scaffold in order to turn such jaw oscillations into vocalized syllables. In the present functional MRI study, we demonstrate overlapping somatotopic representations between the larynx and the jaw muscles in the human primary motor cortex. This proximity between the larynx and jaw in the brain might support the coupling between vocalization and jaw oscillations to generate syllable structure. This model suggests that humans inherited voluntary control of jaw oscillations from ancestral species, but added voluntary control of vocalization onto this via the evolution of a new brain area that came to be situated near the jaw region in the human motor cortex.
一个著名的言语起源模型,即“框架/内容”理论,假设下颌的摆动为言语中音节结构的发展提供了一个进化支架。由于在大多数非人类灵长类动物中,这种摆动是非发声的,因此言语的进化需要在这个支架上增加发声,才能将这种下颌摆动转化为发声的音节。在本项功能磁共振成像研究中,我们证明了人类初级运动皮层中喉和下颌肌肉之间存在重叠的躯体定位图。大脑中喉和下颌的这种接近可能支持发声和下颌摆动之间的耦合,以产生音节结构。该模型表明,人类从祖先物种那里继承了对下颌摆动的自主控制,但通过进化出一个新的大脑区域,在人类运动皮层中靠近下颌区域,从而增加了对发声的自主控制。