How sensory-motor systems impact the neural organization for language: direct contrasts between spoken and signed language
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Emmorey, Karen
[1
]
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McCullough, Stephen
[1
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Mehta, Sonya
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Grabowski, Thomas J.
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Univ Washington, Dept Radiol, Seattle, WA 98195 USASan Diego State Univ, Sch Speech Language & Hearing Sci, Lab Language & Cognit Neurosci, 6495 Alvarado Rd,Suite 200, San Diego, CA 92120 USA
Grabowski, Thomas J.
[3
]
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[1] San Diego State Univ, Sch Speech Language & Hearing Sci, Lab Language & Cognit Neurosci, 6495 Alvarado Rd,Suite 200, San Diego, CA 92120 USA
[2] Univ Washington, Dept Psychol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
[3] Univ Washington, Dept Radiol, Seattle, WA 98195 USA
To investigate the impact of sensory-motor systems on the neural organization for language, we conducted an (H2O)-O-15-PET study of sign and spoken word production (picture-naming) and an fMRI study of sign and audio-visual spoken language comprehension ( detection of a semantically anomalous sentence) with hearing bilinguals who are native users of American Sign Language ( ASL) and English. Directly contrasting speech and sign production revealed greater activation in bilateral parietal cortex for signing, while speaking resulted in greater activation in bilateral superior temporal cortex ( STC) and right frontal cortex, likely reflecting auditory feedback control. Surprisingly, the language production contrast revealed a relative increase inactivation in bilateral occipital cortex for speaking. We speculate that greater activation invisual cortex for speaking may actually reflect cortical attenuation when signing, which functions to distinguish self produced from externally generated visual input. Directly contrasting speech and sign comprehension revealed greater activation in bilateral STC for speech and greater activation in bilateral occipital temporal cortex for sign. Sign comprehension, like sign production, engaged bilateral parietal cortex to a greater extent than spoken language. We hypothesize that posterior parietal activation in part reflects processing related to spatial classifier constructions in ASL and that an terior parietal activation may reflect cover timitation that functions as a predictive model during sign comprehension. The conjunction analysis for comprehension revealed that both speech and sign bilaterally engaged the inferior frontalgyrus ( with more extensive activation on the left) and the superior temporal sulcus, suggesting an invariant bilateral perisylvian language system.
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