The Precentral Insular Cortical Network for Speech Articulation

Author:

Tomaiuolo Francesco1,Campana Serena2,Voci Loredana2,Lasaponara Stefano34,Doricchi Fabrizio54,Petrides Michael6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, Messina University, Piazza Pugliatti, 1 Messina, Italy 98122

2. Neurorehabilitation Unit, Auxilium Vitae Volterra, Volterra, Italy 56048

3. Dipartimento di Scienze Umane, Libera Università Maria Santissima Assunta LUMSA, Rome, Italy 00193

4. Laboratorio di Neuropsicologia dell'attenzione, Fondazione Santa Lucia IRCCS, Rome, Italy 00179

5. La Sapienza University, Rome, Italy 00185

6. Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University, 3801 University Street, Montreal, Quebec, Canada, H3A 2B4

Abstract

Abstract Apraxia of speech is a motor disorder characterized by the impaired ability to coordinate the sequential articulatory movements necessary to produce speech. The critical cortical area(s) involved in speech apraxia remain controversial because many of the previously reported cases had additional aphasic impairments, preventing localization of the specific cortical circuit necessary for the somatomotor execution of speech. Four patients with “pure speech apraxia” (i.e., who had no aphasic and orofacial motor impairments) are reported here. The critical lesion in all four patients involved, in the left hemisphere, the precentral gyrus of the insula (gyrus brevis III) and, to a lesser extent, the nearby areas with which it is strongly connected: the adjacent subcentral opercular cortex (part of secondary somatosensory cortex) and the most inferior part of the central sulcus where the orofacial musculature is represented. There was no damage to rostrally adjacent Broca’s area in the inferior frontal gyrus. The present study demonstrates the critical circuit for the coordination of complex articulatory movements prior to and during the execution of the motor speech plans. Importantly, this specific cortical circuit is different from those that relate to the cognitive aspects of language production (e.g., Broca’s area on the inferior frontal gyrus).

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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