Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
925436 | Brain and Language | 2012 | 12 Pages |
The neural mechanisms used in tone rises and falls in Mandarin were investigated. Nine participants were scanned while they named one-character pictures that required rising or falling tone responses in Mandarin: the left insula and right putamen showed stronger activation between rising and falling tones; the left brainstem showed weaker activation between rising and falling tones. Connectivity analysis showed that the significant projection from the laryngeal motor cortex to the brainstem which was present in rising tones was absent in falling tones. Additionally, there was a significant difference between the connection from the insula to the laryngeal motor cortex which was negative in rising tones but positive in falling tones. These results suggest that the significant projection from the laryngeal motor cortex to the brainstem used in rising tones was not active in falling tones. The connection from the left insula to the laryngeal motor cortex that differs between rising and falling tones may control whether the rise mechanism is active or not.
► Neural mechanisms responsible for rise and fall on Mandarin tones were identified. ► The findings fit well with recent reviews of laryngeal control by Simonyan and Ludlow. ► The results link muscle control in the larynx and the neural mechanisms behind them. ► The findings are relevant to bilingualism and speech pathology.