4.7 Article

The dorsal stream contribution to phonological retrieval in object naming

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages 3799-3814

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/aws300

Keywords

aphasia; dual-stream; voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping; naming; phonological errors; semantic errors

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health/National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders [RO1 DC000191]

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Meaningful speech, as exemplified in object naming, calls on knowledge of the mappings between word meanings and phonological forms. Phonological errors in naming (e.g. GHOST named as 'goath') are commonly seen in persisting post-stroke aphasia and are thought to signal impairment in retrieval of phonological form information. We performed a voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping analysis of 1718 phonological naming errors collected from 106 individuals with diverse profiles of aphasia. Voxels in which lesion status correlated with phonological error rates localized to dorsal stream areas, in keeping with classical and contemporary brain-language models. Within the dorsal stream, the critical voxels were concentrated in premotor cortex, pre- and postcentral gyri and supramarginal gyrus with minimal extension into auditory-related posterior temporal and temporo-parietal cortices. This challenges the popular notion that error-free phonological retrieval requires guidance from sensory traces stored in posterior auditory regions and points instead to sensory-motor processes located further anterior in the dorsal stream. In a separate analysis, we compared the lesion maps for phonological and semantic errors and determined that there was no spatial overlap, demonstrating that the brain segregates phonological and semantic retrieval operations in word production.

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