4.2 Article

Direct electrical stimulation of the left frontal aslant tract disrupts sentence planning without affecting articulation

Journal

COGNITIVE NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
Volume 36, Issue 3-4, Pages 178-192

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02643294.2019.1619544

Keywords

Frontal aslant tract; sentence production; diffusion MRI; direct electrical stimulation; aphasia

Funding

  1. National Eye Institute [P30EY001319, R01EY028535]
  2. Division of Graduate Education [DGE-1449828]
  3. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [R01NSO89069]
  4. Division of Behavioral and Cognitive Sciences [BCS1349042]

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Sentence production involves mapping from deep structures that specify meaning and thematic roles to surface structures that specify the order and sequencing of production ready elements. We propose that the frontal aslant tract is a key pathway for sequencing complex actions with deep hierarchical structure. In the domain of language, and primarily with respect to the left FAT, we refer to this as the 'Syntagmatic Constraints On Positional Elements' (SCOPE) hypothesis. One prediction made by the SCOPE hypothesis is that disruption of the frontal aslant tract should disrupt sentence production at grammatical phrase boundaries, with no disruption of articulatory processes. We test this prediction in a patient undergoing direct electrical stimulation mapping of the frontal aslant tract during an awake craniotomy to remove a left frontal brain tumor. We found that stimulation of the left FAT prolonged inter-word durations at the start of grammatical phrases, while inter-word durations internal to noun phrases were unaffected, and there was no effect on intra-word articulatory duration. These results provide initial support for the SCOPE hypothesis, and motivate novel directions for future research to explore the functions of this recently discovered component of the language system.

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