Electrostimulation mapping of comprehension of auditory and visual words

In order to spare functional areas during the removal of brain tumours, electrical stimulation mapping was used in 90 patients (77 in the left hemisphere and 13 in the right; 2754 cortical sites tested). Language functions were studied with a special focus on comprehension of auditory and visual wor...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cortex 2015-10, Vol.71 (Oct), p.398-408
Hauptverfasser: Roux, Franck-Emmanuel, Minkin, Krasimir, Durand, Jean-Baptiste, Sacko, Oumar, Réhault, Emilie, Tanova, Rositsa, Démonet, Jean-François
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container_end_page 408
container_issue Oct
container_start_page 398
container_title Cortex
container_volume 71
creator Roux, Franck-Emmanuel
Minkin, Krasimir
Durand, Jean-Baptiste
Sacko, Oumar
Réhault, Emilie
Tanova, Rositsa
Démonet, Jean-François
description In order to spare functional areas during the removal of brain tumours, electrical stimulation mapping was used in 90 patients (77 in the left hemisphere and 13 in the right; 2754 cortical sites tested). Language functions were studied with a special focus on comprehension of auditory and visual words and the semantic system. In addition to naming, patients were asked to perform pointing tasks from auditory and visual stimuli (using sets of 4 different images controlled for familiarity), and also auditory object (sound recognition) and Token test tasks. Ninety-two auditory comprehension interference sites were observed. We found that the process of auditory comprehension involved a few, fine-grained, sub-centimetre cortical territories. Early stages of speech comprehension seem to relate to two posterior regions in the left superior temporal gyrus. Downstream lexical-semantic speech processing and sound analysis involved 2 pathways, along the anterior part of the left superior temporal gyrus, and posteriorly around the supramarginal and middle temporal gyri. Electrostimulation experimentally dissociated perceptual consciousness attached to speech comprehension. The initial word discrimination process can be considered as an “automatic” stage, the attention feedback not being impaired by stimulation as would be the case at the lexical-semantic stage. Multimodal organization of the superior temporal gyrus was also detected since some neurones could be involved in comprehension of visual material and naming. These findings demonstrate a fine graded, sub-centimetre, cortical representation of speech comprehension processing mainly in the left superior temporal gyrus and are in line with those described in dual stream models of language comprehension processing.
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2754 cortical sites tested). 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subjects Acoustic Stimulation
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Attention - physiology
Auditory cortex
Auditory Cortex - physiology
Auditory Perception - physiology
Brain Mapping - methods
Brain tumour
Child
Cognitive science
Comprehension - physiology
Cortical mapping
Discrimination (Psychology) - physiology
Electric Stimulation
Female
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neuropsychological Tests
Neuroscience
Neurosurgical Procedures
Photic Stimulation
Reading
Recognition (Psychology) - physiology
Speech comprehension
Temporal Lobe - physiology
Young Adult
title Electrostimulation mapping of comprehension of auditory and visual words
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