4.7 Article

Species and individual differences and connectional asymmetry of Broca's area in humans and macaques

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 244, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118583

Keywords

Comparative anatomy; Primates; Tractography; Homology; Language

Funding

  1. University of Macau [MYRG 2020-00067-FHS, MYRG2019-00082-FHS, MYRG2018-00081-FHS]
  2. Higher Education Fund of Macao SAR Government [CP-UMAC-202001]
  3. Macao Science and Technology Development Fund [FDCT 0020/2019/AMJ, FDCT 0011/2018/A1]
  4. Guangdong-Hong KongMacao Greater Bay Area Center for Brain Science and Brain-Inspired Intelligence Fund [2019011, 1U54MH091657]
  5. NIH Institutes and Centers
  6. NIH Blueprint for Neuroscience Research
  7. BBSRC David Phillips Fellowship [BB/N019814/1, 105651/Z/14/Z]
  8. Wellcome Trust WIN funding [203139/Z/16/Z]
  9. Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
  10. Wellcome Trust [203139/Z/16/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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The study revealed consistent connectional specialization of the Broca's area in humans and macaques, but quantitative differences between corresponding voxels resulted in inter-hemispheric, inter-subject, and inter-species connectional variabilities. Additionally, higher variabilities were detected in the anatomically defined pars triangularis, and a negative relationship was found between inter-species variability and hemispheric asymmetry in the human brain.
To reveal the connectional specialization of the Broca's area (or its homologue), voxel-wise inter-species and individual differences, and inter-hemispheric asymmetry were respectively inspected in humans and macaques at both whole-brain connectivity and single tract levels. It was discovered that the developed connectivity blueprint approach is able to localize connectionally comparable voxels between the two species in Broca's area, whereas the quantitative differences between blueprints of locationally or connectionally corresponding voxels enable us to generate inter-hemispheric, inter-subject, and inter-species connectional variabilities, respectively. More importantly, the inter-species and inter-subject variabilities exhibited positive correlation in both two primates, and relatively higher variabilities were detected in the anatomically defined pars triangularis. By contrast, negative relationship was identified between the inter-species variability and hemispheric asymmetry in human brain. In particular, relatively higher asymmetry was revealed in the anatomically defined pars opercularis. Therefore, our novel findings demonstrated that pars triangularis, as compared to pars opercularis, might be a more active area during primate evolution, in which the brain connectivity and possible functions of pars triangularis show relatively higher degree in species specialization, yet lower in hemispheric specialization. Meanwhile, brain connectivity and possible functions of pars opercularis manifested an opposite pattern. At the tract level, functional roles related to the ventral stream in speech comprehension were relatively conservative and bilaterally organized, while those related to the dorsal stream in speech production show relatively higher species and hemispheric specializations.

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