A functional imaging study of self-regulatory capacities in persons who stutter

Developmental stuttering is a disorder of speech fluency with an unknown pathogenesis. The similarity of its phenotype and natural history with other childhood neuropsychiatric disorders of frontostriatal pathology suggests that stuttering may have a closely related pathogenesis. We investigated in...

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Published inPloS one Vol. 9; no. 2; p. e89891
Main Authors Liu, Jie, Wang, Zhishun, Huo, Yuankai, Davidson, Stephanie M, Klahr, Kristin, Herder, Carl L, Sikora, Chamonix O, Peterson, Bradley S
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Public Library of Science 27.02.2014
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
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Summary:Developmental stuttering is a disorder of speech fluency with an unknown pathogenesis. The similarity of its phenotype and natural history with other childhood neuropsychiatric disorders of frontostriatal pathology suggests that stuttering may have a closely related pathogenesis. We investigated in this study the potential involvement of frontostriatal circuits in developmental stuttering. We collected functional magnetic resonance imaging data from 46 persons with stuttering and 52 fluent controls during performance of the Simon Spatial Incompatibility Task. We examined differences between the two groups of blood-oxygen-level-dependent activation associated with two neural processes, the resolution of cognitive conflict and the context-dependent adaptation to changes in conflict. Stuttering speakers and controls did not differ on behavioral performance on the task. In the presence of conflict-laden stimuli, however, stuttering speakers activated more strongly the cingulate cortex, left anterior prefrontal cortex, right medial frontal cortex, left supplementary motor area, right caudate nucleus, and left parietal cortex. The magnitude of activation in the anterior cingulate cortex correlated inversely in stuttering speakers with symptom severity. Stuttering speakers also showed blunted activation during context-dependent adaptation in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, a brain region that mediates cross-temporal contingencies. Frontostriatal hyper-responsivity to conflict resembles prior findings in other disorders of frontostriatal pathology, and therefore likely represents a general mechanism supporting functional compensation for an underlying inefficiency of neural processing in these circuits. The reduced activation of dorsolateral prefrontal cortex likely represents the inadequate readiness of stuttering speakers to execute a sequence of motor responses.
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Current address: Hope for Stuttering Speech Therapy, Westport, Connecticut, United States of America
Current address: The Ruth and Raymond Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Conceived and designed the experiments: BSP. Performed the experiments: KK SMD CLH COS BSP. Analyzed the data: JL ZW YH BSP. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: CLH COS. Wrote the paper: JL ZW YH KK SMD CLH COS BSP.
Competing Interests: The authors have read the journal’s policy and have the following conflicts. This work is supported by the McGue Millhiser Family Trust and the Suzanne Crosby Murphy Endowment at Columbia University. BSP is listed as an inventor of three issued or pending patents (US Patent Application Number 61/601,772. Filed 02/22/2012. Assignee: Trustees of Columbia University. Arrangement and Method for Decoupling of RF Coil Arrays Using One or More Non- Standardly-Matched Coil Elements. Inventors: Yunsuo Duan, Feng Liu, Bradley S. Peterson, Alayar Kangarlu; US Patent Application Number 8,143,890B2. Filed 05/22/2009. Approved 03/27/2012. Assignee: Trustees of Columbia University. Spectral Resolution Enhancement of Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopic Imaging. Inventors: Zhengchao Dong & Bradley S. Peterson; US Patent Application Number 61/424,172. Filed 12/17/10. Assignee: Trustees of Columbia University. Apparatus, Method, and Computer-Accessible Medium for Diagnosing and Subtyping Psychiatric Diseases. Inventors: Ravi Bansal & Bradley S. Peterson). This does not alter the authors’ adherence to all the PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0089891