4.7 Article

Structural Organization of the Laryngeal Motor Cortical Network and Its Implication for Evolution of Speech Production

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
卷 36, 期 15, 页码 4170-4181

出版社

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3914-15.2016

关键词

diffusion imaging; laryngeal control; motor cortex; neuroanatomy; speech; white matter pathways

资金

  1. National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health [R01DC01180]
  2. Charles H. Revson Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The laryngeal motor cortex (LMC) is essential for the production of learned vocal behaviors because bilateral damage to this area renders humans unable to speak but has no apparent effect on innate vocalizations such as human laughing and crying or monkey calls. Several hypotheses have been put forward attempting to explain the evolutionary changes from monkeys to humans that potentially led to enhanced LMC functionality for finer motor control of speech production. These views, however, remain limited to the position of the larynx area within the motor cortex, as well as its connections with the phonatory brainstem regions responsible for the direct control of laryngeal muscles. Using probabilistic diffusion tractography in healthy humans and rhesus monkeys, we show that, whereas the LMC structural network is largely comparable in both species, the LMC establishes nearly 7-fold stronger connectivity with the somatosensory and inferior parietal cortices in humans than in macaques. These findings suggest that important hard-wired components of the human LMC network controlling the laryngeal component of speech motor output evolved from an already existing, similar network in nonhuman primates. However, the evolution of enhanced LMC-parietal connections likely allowed for more complex synchrony of higher-order sensorimotor coordination, proprioceptive and tactile feedback, and modulation of learned voice for speech production.

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