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Unilateral hemispheric lesions disrupt parallel processing within the contralateral intact hemisphere: an auditory fMRI study

Authors :
Adriani, Michela
Bellmann, Anne
Meuli, Reto
Fornari, Eleonora
Frischknecht, Rolf
Bindschaedler, Claire
Rivier, François
Thiran, Jean-Philippe
Maeder, Philippe
Clarke, Stephanie
Source :
NeuroImage. Nov2003 Supplement 1, Vol. 20, pS66. 0p.
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

Evidence from activation studies suggests that sound recognition and localization are processed in two distinct cortical networks that are each present in both hemispheres. Sound recognition and/or localization may, however, be disrupted by purely unilateral damage, suggesting that processing within one hemisphere may not be sufficient or may be disturbed by the contralateral lesion. Sound recognition and localization were investigated psychophysically and using fMRI in patients with unilateral right hemisphere lesions. Two patients had a combined deficit in sound recognition and sound localization, two a selective deficit in sound localization, one a selective deficit in sound recognition, and two normal performance in both tasks. The overall level of activation in the intact left hemisphere of the patients was smaller than in normal control subjects, irrespective of whether the patient''s performance in the psychophysical tasks was impaired. Despite this overall decrease in activation strength, patients with normal performance still exhibited activation patterns similar to those of the control subjects in the recognition and localization tasks, indicating that the specialized brain networks subserving sound recognition and sound localization in normal subjects were also activated in the patients with normal performance, albeit to an altogether lesser degree. In patients with deficient performance, on the other hand, the activation patterns during the sound recognition and localization tasks were severely reduced, comprising fewer and partly atypical activation foci compared to the normal subjects. This indicates that impaired psychophysical performance correlates with a breakdown of parallel processing within specialized networks in the contralesional hemisphere. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]

Subjects

Subjects :
*BRAIN
*SOUND
*CEREBRAL hemispheres

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10538119
Volume :
20
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
NeuroImage
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
11258984
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2003.09.007