Author:
Khalilian-Gourtani Amirhossein,Wang Ran,Chen Xupeng,Yu Leyao,Dugan Patricia,Friedman Daniel,Doyle Werner,Devinsky Orrin,Wang Yao,Flinker Adeen
Abstract
AbstractWhen we vocalize, our brain distinguishes self-generated sounds from external ones. A corollary discharge signal supports this function in animals, however, in humans its exact origin and temporal dynamics remain unknown. We report Electrocorticographic (ECoG) recordings in neurosurgical patients and a novel connectivity approach revealing major neural communications. We find a reproducible source for corollary discharge across multiple speech production paradigms localized to ventral speech motor cortex before speech articulation. The uncovered discharge predicts the degree of auditory cortex suppression during speech, its well-documented consequence. These results reveal the human corollary discharge source and timing with far-reaching implication for speech motor-control as well as auditory hallucinations in human psychosis.One-sentence summaryWe reveal the source and timing of a corollary discharge from speech motor cortex onto auditory cortex in human speech.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
11 articles.
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