4.6 Article

Unmasking Language Lateralization in Human Brain Intrinsic Activity

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 1733-1746

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhv007

Keywords

attention network; global signal; hemispheric asymmetry; resting-state; semantic network

Categories

Funding

  1. Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology [MIR 12-023, MRF 3618-92508]
  2. National Institutes of Health [NINDS NS080675, NS061144, 5R01 HD057076-S1, R01HD057076, K12 EY16336, K01DA027046]
  3. McDonnell Foundation
  4. Simons Foundation [95177]
  5. Washington University Neuroimaging Informatics and Analysis Center [5P30NS048056]
  6. Barnes-Jewish Hospital Foundation
  7. McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience as Washington University
  8. Alvin J. Siteman Cancer Center (via NCI Cancer Center Support Grant) [P30 CA91842]
  9. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities Research Center at Washington University [NIH/NICHD P30 HD062171]

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Lateralization of function is a fundamental feature of the human brain as exemplified by the left hemisphere dominance of language. Despite the prominence of lateralization in the lesion, split-brain and task-based fMRI literature, surprisingly little asymmetry has been revealed in the increasingly popular functional imaging studies of spontaneous fluctuations in the fMRI BOLD signal (so-called resting-state fMRI). Here, we show the global signal, an often discarded component of the BOLD signal in resting-state studies, reveals a leftward asymmetry that maps onto regions preferential for semantic processing in left frontal and temporal cortex and the right cerebellum and a rightward asymmetry that maps onto putative attention-related regions in right frontal, temporoparietal, and parietal cortex. Hemispheric asymmetries in the global signal resulted from amplitude modulation of the spontaneous fluctuations. To confirm these findings obtained from normal, healthy, right-handed subjects in the resting-state, we had them perform 2 semantic processing tasks: synonym and numerical magnitude judgment and sentence comprehension. In addition to establishing a new technique for studying lateralization through functional imaging of the resting-state, our findings shed new light on the physiology of the global brain signal.

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