An fMRI study of initiation and inhibition of manual responses in people who stutter

Author:

Wiltshire Charlotte E. E.ORCID,Chesters Jennifer,Krishnan Saloni,Healy Máiréad P.,Watkins Kate E.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractDevelopmental stuttering is a speech motor disorder characterised by difficulties initiating speech and frequent interruptions to the speech flow. Previous work suggests that people who stutter (PWS) have an overactive response suppression mechanism. Imaging studies of speech production in PWS consistently reveal greater activity of the right inferior frontal cortex, an area robustly implicated in inhibitory control of both manual and spoken responses. Here, we used a manual response version of the stop-signal task during fMRI to investigate neural differences related to response initiation and inhibition in PWS. Behaviourally, PWS were slower to respond to ‘go’ stimuli than people who are typically fluent (PWTF), but there was no difference in stop-signal reaction time. Our fMRI results were consistent with these behavioural results. The fMRI analysis revealed the expected networks associated with manual response initiation and inhibition in both groups. However, all contrasts between the two groups were characterised by overactivity in PWS relative to PWTF. This overactivity was significantly different for the initiation of responses (i.e. the ‘go’ trials) but not for response inhibition (i.e. the ‘stop’ trials). One explanation of these results is that PWS are consistently in a heightened inhibition state, i.e. areas of the inhibition network are more active, generally. This interpretation is consistent with predictions from the global response suppression hypothesis.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cited by 3 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Exogenous verbal response inhibition in adults who do and do not stutter;Journal of Fluency Disorders;2023-03

2. Why Stuttering Occurs;Topics in Language Disorders;2022-01

3. Verbal Response Inhibition in Adults Who Stutter;Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research;2021-09-14

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