Spatiotemporal patterns of brain activation during an action naming task using magnetoencephalography

被引:20
作者
Breier, Joshua I. [1 ]
Papanicolaou, Andrew C. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Houston, Hlth Sci Ctr, Ctr Clin Nurosci, Dept Pediat Neurol & Neurosurg, Houston, TX 77030 USA
关键词
magnetoencephalography; cognition; naming;
D O I
10.1097/WNP.0b013e318163ccd5
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Eight right-handed subjects were asked to silently generate a verb to a visual stimulus while the magnetic flux normal to the scalp surface was recorded with a whole-head neuromagnetometer. The spatiotemporal patterns of activation in lateral occipital, inferior parietal, superior temporal, basal temporal, and inferior frontal cortices were estimated using minimum estimation, a distributed source analysis methodology. Although there was significant variability among subjects, averaged data indicated that latencies of peak activation in these regions of interest progressed from posterior to anterior. Peak latencies were earliest in lateral occipital cortex and latest in pars opercularis and pars triangularis in the inferior frontal gyrus. Lateralization of activation was strongest in pars opercularis, which is part of classical Broca's area, with activation being stronger in this area within the left hemisphere in every subject. Results provide support for the use of magnetoencephalography in conjunction with NINE analysis for the purpose of lateralizing and localizing language-specific activation in frontal areas as well as the study of the spatiotemporal parameters of brain activation associated with cognitive function.
引用
收藏
页码:7 / 12
页数:6
相关论文
共 32 条
[1]   Analysis of neural mechanisms underlying verbal fluency in cytoarchitectonically defined stereotaxic space - The roles of Brodmann areas 44 and 45 [J].
Amunts, K ;
Weiss, PH ;
Mohlberg, H ;
Pieperhoff, P ;
Eickhoff, S ;
Gurd, JM ;
Marshall, JC ;
Shah, NJ ;
Fink, GR ;
Zilles, K .
NEUROIMAGE, 2004, 22 (01) :42-56
[2]  
[Anonymous], MNE SOFTWARE USERS G
[3]   Hemispheric language dominance testing by means of fMRI [J].
Baciu, M ;
Rubin, C ;
Décorps, M ;
Segebarth, C .
JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING, 1999, 9 (04) :246-247
[4]   Differential activation of frontal lobe areas by lexical and semantic language tasks: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study [J].
Blacker, D ;
Byrnes, ML ;
Mastaglia, FL ;
Thickbroom, GW .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NEUROSCIENCE, 2006, 13 (01) :91-95
[5]   Functional MRI of language: New approaches to understanding the cortical organization of semantic processing [J].
Bookheimer, S .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF NEUROSCIENCE, 2002, 25 :151-188
[6]   MEG localization of language-specific cortex utilizing MR-FOCUSS [J].
Bowyer, SM ;
Moran, JE ;
Mason, KM ;
Constantinou, JE ;
Smith, BJ ;
Barkley, GL ;
Tepley, N .
NEUROLOGY, 2004, 62 (12) :2247-2255
[7]   Unitary vs multiple semantics: PET studies of word and picture processing [J].
Bright, P ;
Moss, H ;
Tyler, LK .
BRAIN AND LANGUAGE, 2004, 89 (03) :417-432
[8]  
BROCA P, 1861, B SOC ANAT PARIS, V6, P330, DOI DOI 10.1093/ACPROF:OSO/9780195177640.003.0018
[9]   A systematic review and quantitative appraisal of fMRI studies of verbal fluency: Role of the left inferior frontal gyrus [J].
Costafreda, Sergi G. ;
Fu, Cynthia H. Y. ;
Lee, Lucy ;
Everitt, Brian ;
Brammer, Michael J. ;
David, Anthony S. .
HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2006, 27 (10) :799-810
[10]   Cortical surface-based analysis - I. Segmentation and surface reconstruction [J].
Dale, AM ;
Fischl, B ;
Sereno, MI .
NEUROIMAGE, 1999, 9 (02) :179-194