The brain's speech area, named after 19th century French physician Pierre Paul Broca, shuts down when we talk out loud, according to a new study that challenges the long-held assumption that 'Broca's area' governs all aspects of speech production.
For 150 years, the iconic Broca's area of the brain has been recognized as the command center for human speech, including vocalization. Now, scientists at UC Berkeley and Johns Hopkins University in Maryland are challenging this long-held assumption with new evidence that Broca's area actually switches off when we talk out loud.
The findings, reported in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences journal, provide a more complex picture than previously thought of the frontal brain regions involved in speech production. The discovery has major implications for the diagnoses and treatments of stroke, epilepsy and brain injuries that result in language impairments.
"Every year millions of people suffer from stroke, some of which can lead to severe impairments in perceiving and producing language when critical brain areas are damaged," said study lead author Adeen Flinker, a postdoctoral researcher at New York University who conducted the study as a UC Berkeley Ph.D. student. "Our results could help us advance language mapping during neurosurgery as well as the assessment of language impairments."
Flinker said that neuroscientists traditionally organized the brain's language center into two main regions: one for perceiving speech and one for producing speech.
"That belief drives how we map out language during neurosurgery and classify language impairments," he said. "This new finding helps us move towards a less dichotomous view where Broca's area is not a center for speech production, but rather a critical area for integrating and coordinating information across other brain regions."
In the 1860s, French physician Pierre Paul Broca pinpointed this prefrontal brain region as the seat of speech. Broca's area has since ranked among the brain's most closely examined language regions in cognitive psychology. People with Broca's aphasia are characterized as having suffered damage to the brain's frontal lobe and tend to speak in short, stilted phrases that often omit short connecting words such as "the" and "and."
Specifically, Flinker and fellow researchers have found that Broca's area -- which is located in the frontal cortex above and behind the left eye -- engages with the brain's temporal cortex, which organizes sensory input, and later the motor cortex, as we process language and plan which sounds and movements of the mouth to use, and in what order. However, the study found, it disengages when we actually start to utter word sequences.
"Broca's area shuts down during the actual delivery of speech, but it may remain active during conversation as part of planning future words and full sentences," Flinker said.
The study tracked electrical signals emitted from the brains of seven hospitalized epilepsy patients as they repeated spoken and written words aloud. Researchers followed that brain activity -- using event-related causality technology -- from the auditory cortex, where the patients processed the words they heard, to Broca's area, where they prepared to articulate the words to repeat, to the motor cortex, where they finally spoke the words out loud.
GMT 10:53 2018 Tuesday ,09 January
Apple urged to shield kids from iPhone addictionGMT 10:28 2017 Saturday ,09 December
Bitcoin surges above $16,000 as concerns mountGMT 12:38 2017 Thursday ,02 November
Gulf Craft Continues to Redefine On-Water Lifestyle ExperienceGMT 09:30 2017 Wednesday ,18 October
Is facial recognition the stuff of sci-fi? Not in ChinaGMT 00:01 2017 Thursday ,05 October
This new machine will help boost skills of medic at Oman's College of Medicine and Health SciencesGMT 23:42 2017 Wednesday ,04 October
Robots under Swedish forest breathe life into ancient minesGMT 21:31 2017 Wednesday ,04 October
Russia, Saudi Arabia to set up $1 bln technology fundGMT 18:58 2017 Friday ,29 September
Lockheed Martin unveils reusable water-powered Mars landerMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2023 ©