Scientific article
OA Policy
English

Speaking-related changes in cortical functional connectivity associated with assisted and spontaneous recovery from developmental stuttering

Published inJournal of Fluency Disorders, vol. 55, p. 135-144
Publication date2018-03
First online date2017-02-13
Abstract

We previously reported speaking-related activity changes associated with assisted recovery induced by a fluency shaping therapy program and unassisted recovery from developmental stuttering (Kell et al., Brain 2009). While assisted recovery re-lateralized activity to the left hemisphere, unassisted recovery was specifically associated with the activation of the left BA 47/12 in the lateral orbitofrontal cortex. These findings suggested plastic changes in speaking-related functional connectivity between left hemispheric speech network nodes. We reanalyzed these data involving 13 stuttering men before and after fluency shaping, 13 men who recovered spontaneously from their stuttering, and 13 male control participants, and examined functional connectivity during overt vs. covert reading by means of psychophysiological interactions computed across left cortical regions involved in articulation control. Persistent stuttering was associated with reduced auditory-motor coupling and enhanced integration of somatosensory feedback between the supramarginal gyrus and the prefrontal cortex. Assisted recovery reduced this hyper-connectivity and increased functional connectivity between the articulatory motor cortex and the auditory feedback processing anterior superior temporal gyrus. In spontaneous recovery, both auditory-motor coupling and integration of somatosensory feedback were normalized. In addition, activity in the left orbitofrontal cortex and superior cerebellum appeared uncoupled from the rest of the speech production network. These data suggest that therapy and spontaneous recovery normalizes the left hemispheric speaking-related activity via an improvement of auditory-motor mapping. By contrast, long-lasting unassisted recovery from stuttering is additionally supported by a functional isolation of the superior cerebellum from the rest of the speech production network, through the pivotal left BA 47/12.

Keywords
  • Adult
  • Brain / physiopathology
  • Brain Mapping
  • Case-Control Studies
  • Cerebellum / physiopathology
  • Female
  • Functional Laterality / physiology
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Motor Cortex
  • Neuronal Plasticity / physiology
  • Reading
  • Speech / physiology
  • Speech Perception / physiology
  • Speech Therapy / methods
  • Stuttering / physiopathology
  • Stuttering / therapy
Citation (ISO format)
KELL, Christian A. et al. Speaking-related changes in cortical functional connectivity associated with assisted and spontaneous recovery from developmental stuttering. In: Journal of Fluency Disorders, 2018, vol. 55, p. 135–144. doi: 10.1016/j.jfludis.2017.02.001
Main files (2)
Article (Accepted version)
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Article (Published version)
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Identifiers
Journal ISSN0094-730X
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730downloads

Technical informations

Creation09/12/2017 7:15:00 PM
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