Timing and location of speech errors induced by direct cortical stimulation

Author:

Kabakoff Heather1ORCID,Yu Leyao2,Friedman Daniel1ORCID,Dugan Patricia1,Doyle Werner K3,Devinsky Orrin1ORCID,Flinker Adeen12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, New York University School of Medicine , New York, NY 10016 , USA

2. Department of Biomedical Engineering, New York University School of Engineering , Brooklyn, NY 11201 , USA

3. Department of Neurosurgery, New York University School of Medicine , New York, NY 10016 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Cortical regions supporting speech production are commonly established using neuroimaging techniques in both research and clinical settings. However, for neurosurgical purposes, structural function is routinely mapped peri-operatively using direct electrocortical stimulation. While this method is the gold standard for identification of eloquent cortical regions to preserve in neurosurgical patients, there is lack of specificity of the actual underlying cognitive processes being interrupted. To address this, we propose mapping the temporal dynamics of speech arrest across peri-sylvian cortices by quantifying the latency between stimulation and speech deficits. In doing so, we are able to substantiate hypotheses about distinct region-specific functional roles (e.g. planning versus motor execution). In this retrospective observational study, we analysed 20 patients (12 female; age range 14–43) with refractory epilepsy who underwent continuous extra-operative intracranial EEG monitoring of an automatic speech task during clinical bedside language mapping. Latency to speech arrest was calculated as time from stimulation onset to speech arrest onset, controlling for individual speech rate. Most instances of motor-based arrest (87.5% of 96 instances) were in sensorimotor cortex with mid-range latencies to speech arrest with a distributional peak at 0.47 s. Speech arrest occurred in numerous regions, with relatively short latencies in supramarginal gyrus (0.46 s), superior temporal gyrus (0.51 s) and middle temporal gyrus (0.54 s), followed by relatively long latencies in sensorimotor cortex (0.72 s) and especially long latencies in inferior frontal gyrus (0.95 s). Non-parametric testing for speech arrest revealed that region predicted latency; latencies in supramarginal gyrus and in superior temporal gyrus were shorter than in sensorimotor cortex and in inferior frontal gyrus. Sensorimotor cortex is primarily responsible for motor-based arrest. Latencies to speech arrest in supramarginal gyrus and superior temporal gyrus (and to a lesser extent middle temporal gyrus) align with latencies to motor-based arrest in sensorimotor cortex. This pattern of relatively quick cessation of speech suggests that stimulating these regions interferes with the outgoing motor execution. In contrast, the latencies to speech arrest in inferior frontal gyrus and in ventral regions of sensorimotor cortex were significantly longer than those in temporoparietal regions. Longer latencies in the more frontal areas (including inferior frontal gyrus and ventral areas of precentral gyrus and postcentral gyrus) suggest that stimulating these areas interrupts a higher-level speech production process involved in planning. These results implicate the ventral specialization of sensorimotor cortex (including both precentral and postcentral gyri) for speech planning above and beyond motor execution.

Funder

United States National Insitutes of Health

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders

National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Reference36 articles.

1. Contemporary model of language organization: An overview for neurosurgeons;Chang;J Neurosurg,2015

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3. An extraoperative functional atlas based on electrocortical stimulation mapping;Kazl;J Clin Neurophysiol,2021

4. Three- and four-dimensional mapping of speech and language in patients with epilepsy;Nakai;Brain,2017

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