4.6 Article

Behavioural and neuroanatomical correlates of auditory speech analysis in primary progressive aphasias

Journal

ALZHEIMERS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13195-017-0278-2

Keywords

Speech; Auditory; Voxel-based morphometry; Primary progressive aphasia; Semantic dementia; Progressive non-fluent aphasia

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Society [AS-PG-16-007]
  2. National Institute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre [CBRC 161]
  3. UCL Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre [PR/ylr/18575]
  4. Medical Research Council (MRC)
  5. Wolfson Foundation
  6. National Brain Appeal-Frontotemporal Dementia Research Fund
  7. Alzheimer's Research UK [ART-SRF2010-3]
  8. Wellcome Trust [091673/Z/10/Z]
  9. MRC [MR/M023664/1, MR/M009106/1, MR/M008525/1, MR/J009482/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  10. Medical Research Council [MR/M009106/1, MR/M008525/1, 1332163, 1332624, MR/J009482/1, MR/M023664/1] Funding Source: researchfish
  11. National Institute for Health Research [CL-2012-18-010] Funding Source: researchfish

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Background: Non-verbal auditory impairment is increasingly recognised in the primary progressive aphasias (PPAs) but its relationship to speech processing and brain substrates has not been defined. Here we addressed these issues in patients representing the non-fluent variant (nfvPPA) and semantic variant (svPPA) syndromes of PPA. Methods: We studied 19 patients with PPA in relation to 19 healthy older individuals. We manipulated three key auditory parameters-temporal regularity, phonemic spectral structure and prosodic predictability (an index of fundamental information content, or entropy)-in sequences of spoken syllables. The ability of participants to process these parameters was assessed using two-alternative, forced-choice tasks and neuroanatomical associations of task performance were assessed using voxel-based morphometry of patients' brain magnetic resonance images. Results: Relative to healthy controls, both the nfvPPA and svPPA groups had impaired processing of phonemic spectral structure and signal predictability while the nfvPPA group additionally had impaired processing of temporal regularity in speech signals. Task performance correlated with standard disease severity and neurolinguistic measures. Across the patient cohort, performance on the temporal regularity task was associated with grey matter in the left supplementary motor area and right caudate, performance on the phoneme processing task was associated with grey matter in the left supramarginal gyrus, and performance on the prosodic predictability task was associated with grey matter in the right putamen. C Conclusions: Our findings suggest that PPA syndromes may be underpinned by more generic deficits of auditory signal analysis, with a distributed cortico-subcortical neuraoanatomical substrate extending beyond the canonical language network. This has implications for syndrome classification and biomarker development.

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