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Original Articles

Spatio-Temporal Cortical Dynamics of Phonemic and Semantic Fluency

, , , , , & show all
Pages 1031-1043 | Accepted 01 Dec 2003, Published online: 16 Aug 2010
 

ABSTRACT

Hemodynamic brain imaging and lesion studies have suggested differential involvement of expressive language-related cortical regions based on the phonemic versus semantic characteristics of verbal cues. The aims of this study were: 1) to elucidate the relative timing of the activity of inferior frontal and anterior insular versus motor and supplementary motor cortex during a fluency task and 2) to assess potential differences in the location or timing of activity in anterior and posterior language areas based on letter versus category cues. Using magnetic source imaging (MSI), we found significantly earlier onset latencies and a greater number of activity sources in motor and supplementary motor compared with inferior frontal and anterior insular regions. We also observed greater left versus right hemispheric asymmetry of activation for letter compared with category cues. This study provides new insights into cortico-cortical interactions during expressive language tasks.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

We thank Shelly Fitzgerald, Vanessa Fuller, and David Molfese for their help in testing participants. We thank Dr. Mary Pat McAndrews for sharing stimuli from her fMRI verbal fluency task that we used in our adaptation of the paradigm for MSI. This work was supported in part by a grant from the National Institute for Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NS 37941) and a major instrumentation grant from the National Science Foundation (BCS 0116150).

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