Department of Neurological Surgery, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15213.
School of Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China.
J Neurosci. 2022 Apr 13;42(15):3228-3240. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1332-21.2022. Epub 2022 Mar 1.
To explore whether the thalamus participates in lexical status (word vs nonword) processing during spoken word production, we recorded local field potentials from the ventral lateral thalamus in 11 essential tremor patients (three females) undergoing thalamic deep-brain stimulation lead implantation during a visually cued word and nonword reading-aloud task. We observed task-related beta (12-30 Hz) activity decreases that were preferentially time locked to stimulus presentation, and broadband gamma (70-150 Hz) activity increases, which are thought to index increased multiunit spiking activity, occurring shortly before and predominantly time locked to speech onset. We further found that thalamic beta activity decreases bilaterally were greater when nonwords were read, demonstrating bilateral sensitivity to lexical status that likely reflects the tracking of task effort; in contrast, greater nonword-related increases in broadband gamma activity were observed only on the left, demonstrating lateralization of thalamic broadband gamma selectivity for lexical status. In addition, this lateralized lexicality effect on broadband gamma activity was strongest in more anterior thalamic locations, regions which are more likely to receive basal ganglia than cerebellar afferents and have extensive connections with prefrontal cortex including Brodmann's areas 44 and 45, regions consistently associated with grapheme-to-phoneme conversions. These results demonstrate active thalamic participation in reading aloud and provide direct evidence from intracranial thalamic recordings for the lateralization and topography of subcortical lexical status processing. Despite the corticocentric focus of most experimental work and accompanying models, there is increasing recognition of the role of subcortical structures in speech and language. Using local field potential recordings in neurosurgical patients, we demonstrated that the thalamus participates in lexical status (word vs nonword) processing during spoken word production, in a lateralized and region-specific manner. These results provide direct evidence from intracranial thalamic recordings for the lateralization and topography of subcortical lexical status processing.
为了探究丘脑是否参与口语产生过程中的词汇状态(单词与非单词)处理,我们在 11 名特发性震颤患者(3 名女性)进行丘脑深部脑刺激植入术期间,记录了他们丘脑腹外侧的局部场电位,这些患者在视觉提示单词和非单词朗读任务中接受了记录。我们观察到与任务相关的β(12-30 Hz)活动减少,这些减少与刺激呈现时间锁定,并且出现宽带γ(70-150 Hz)活动增加,这被认为是索引多单位尖峰活动增加,发生在言语起始前不久且主要与言语起始时间锁定。我们进一步发现,当阅读非单词时,双侧丘脑β活动减少更大,表明对词汇状态的双侧敏感性,这可能反映了对任务努力的跟踪;相反,仅在左侧观察到更大的宽带γ活动与非单词相关增加,表明丘脑宽带γ对词汇状态的选择性偏侧化。此外,这种宽带γ活动的偏侧化词汇效应在更靠前的丘脑位置最强,这些位置更有可能接收基底节而不是小脑传入,并且与前额叶皮层(包括 Brodmann 区 44 和 45)有广泛的连接,这些区域与字符到音素转换一致相关。这些结果表明丘脑积极参与朗读,并提供了来自颅内丘脑记录的皮层下词汇状态处理的偏侧化和拓扑结构的直接证据。尽管大多数实验工作和伴随的模型都以皮质为中心,但越来越多的人认识到皮质下结构在言语和语言中的作用。我们使用神经外科患者的局部场电位记录,证明了丘脑在口语产生过程中参与词汇状态(单词与非单词)处理,以偏侧化和区域特异性的方式。这些结果提供了来自颅内丘脑记录的皮层下词汇状态处理的偏侧化和拓扑结构的直接证据。