4.4 Article

A functional dissociation between language and multiple-demand systems revealed in patterns of BOLD signal fluctuations

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 112, Issue 5, Pages 1105-1118

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00884.2013

Keywords

functional connectivity; language; multiple demand system

Funding

  1. Ellison Medical Foundation
  2. Simons Center
  3. Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development Award [K99 HD-057522]
  4. [EY13455]

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What is the relationship between language and other high-level cognitive functions? Neuroimaging studies have begun to illuminate this question, revealing that some brain regions are quite selectively engaged during language processing, whereas other multiple-demand (MD) regions are broadly engaged by diverse cognitive tasks. Nonetheless, the functional dissociation between the language and MD systems remains controversial. Here, we tackle this question with a synergistic combination of functional MRI methods: we first define candidate language-specific and MD regions in each subject individually (using functional localizers) and then measure blood oxygen level-dependent signal fluctuations in these regions during two naturalistic conditions (rest and story-comprehension). In both conditions, signal fluctuations strongly correlate among language regions as well as among MD regions, but correlations across systems are weak or negative. Moreover, data-driven clustering analyses based on these inter-region correlations consistently recover two clusters corresponding to the language and MD systems. Thus although each system forms an internally integrated whole, the two systems dissociate sharply from each other. This independent recruitment of the language and MD systems during cognitive processing is consistent with the hypothesis that these two systems support distinct cognitive functions.

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