Introduction: Phonological impairment and articulatory programming impairment may co-occur in aphasic patients and previous research does not offer a clear-cut picture of their anatomical counterparts. Methods: In this study we aimed at disentangling the neuroanatomical foundation of the phonological and articulatory component in a large cohort of aphasic patients. We analyzed speech sampling at the Aachen Aphasia Test (AAT) and we employed voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VLSM) to correlate the behavioral performance with the underlying neuroanatomical basis. Results: Predominant phonological impairment is associated with lesions localized in the areas assigned to the phonological network (dorsal superior temporal gyrus, mid-to-posterior superior temporal gyrus). Predominant articulatory impairment is underpinned by damage at the posterior inferior frontal gyrus, premotor cortex and anterior insula. Discussion: In general, our results are in line with Hickok and Poeppel’s (2004; 2008) model of phonological processing and also support a peculiar role played by the anterior insula in articulatory planning (Dronkers & Ogar, 2004). References: Hickok, G. et al. Nature (2007) 8:393-402; Hickok, G., et al. Cognition (2004) 92: 67-99; Dronkers, N. et al. Brain(2004)127:1461-1462.

Ripamonti, E., Frustaci, M., Zonca, G., Aggujaro, S., Molteni, F., Luzzatti, C. (2017). The anatomical basis of articulatory and phonological processes: A VLSM study in a cohort of aphasic patients. In Proceedings of the 35th European Workshop on Cognitive Neuropsychology.

The anatomical basis of articulatory and phonological processes: A VLSM study in a cohort of aphasic patients

RIPAMONTI, ENRICO;LUZZATTI, CLAUDIO GIUSEPPE
2017

Abstract

Introduction: Phonological impairment and articulatory programming impairment may co-occur in aphasic patients and previous research does not offer a clear-cut picture of their anatomical counterparts. Methods: In this study we aimed at disentangling the neuroanatomical foundation of the phonological and articulatory component in a large cohort of aphasic patients. We analyzed speech sampling at the Aachen Aphasia Test (AAT) and we employed voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping (VLSM) to correlate the behavioral performance with the underlying neuroanatomical basis. Results: Predominant phonological impairment is associated with lesions localized in the areas assigned to the phonological network (dorsal superior temporal gyrus, mid-to-posterior superior temporal gyrus). Predominant articulatory impairment is underpinned by damage at the posterior inferior frontal gyrus, premotor cortex and anterior insula. Discussion: In general, our results are in line with Hickok and Poeppel’s (2004; 2008) model of phonological processing and also support a peculiar role played by the anterior insula in articulatory planning (Dronkers & Ogar, 2004). References: Hickok, G. et al. Nature (2007) 8:393-402; Hickok, G., et al. Cognition (2004) 92: 67-99; Dronkers, N. et al. Brain(2004)127:1461-1462.
abstract + poster
Aphasia; lesion mapping; articulation; phonology
English
European Workshop on Cognitive Neuropsychology
2017
Proceedings of the 35th European Workshop on Cognitive Neuropsychology
2017
55, Language 16
none
Ripamonti, E., Frustaci, M., Zonca, G., Aggujaro, S., Molteni, F., Luzzatti, C. (2017). The anatomical basis of articulatory and phonological processes: A VLSM study in a cohort of aphasic patients. In Proceedings of the 35th European Workshop on Cognitive Neuropsychology.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/148627
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