Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging Assessment of the Human Brain Auditory Cortex Response to Increasing Word Presentation Rates

Author:

Dhankhar Ajay1,Wexler Bruce E.2,Fulbright Robert K.3,Halwes Terry2,Blamire ANDREW M.4,Shulman Robert G.1

Affiliation:

1. Molecular Biophysics and Biochemistry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Connecticut 06510

2. Departments of Psychiatry,

3. Radiology,

4. Neurosurgery, and

Abstract

Dhankhar, Ajay, Bruce E. Wexler, Robert K. Fulbright, Terry Halwes, Andrew M. Blamire, and Robert G. Shulman. Functional magnetic resonance imaging assessment of the human brain auditory cortex response to increasing word presentation rates. J. Neurophysiol. 77: 476–483, 1997. In an investigation of the auditory cortex response to speech, six subjects were studied using echo-planar functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at 2.1T. The subjects were asked to listen to English nouns presented at various rates ranging from 0 words per minute (wpm) to 130 wpm while fMRI images encompassing their primary and posterior superior secondary auditory cortices were acquired. An asymmetric spin echo imaging sequence was used with an induced T2 weighting of 50 ms to allow for transverse relaxation effects. Images were acquired in two or four axial-oblique slices with a repetition time of 3.75 or 7.5 s, in plane resolution of 6 × 3 mm, and a slice thickness of 5 mm. Localized activation centered over grey matter was consistently observed in all subjects in the transverse temporal gyrus (TTG), the transverse temporal sulcus (TTS), and the posterior superior aspect of the superior temporal gyrus (STG). The total activated volume and the integrated signal response in bilateral primary and posterior superior secondary auditory cortices increased with increasing rate of word presentation, peaking at 90 wpm (with some intersubject variability) with a subsequent fall at 130 wpm. There were no significant differences in the rate dependence of the signal response in bilateral primary and bilateral posterior superior secondary auditory cortices ( P < 0.05).

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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