The Role of the Insular Cortex in Pitch Pattern Perception: The Effect of Linguistic Contexts
Open Access
- 13 October 2004
- journal article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 24 (41) , 9153-9160
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.2225-04.2004
Abstract
Auditory pitch patterns are significant ecological features to which nervous systems have exquisitely adapted. Pitch patterns are found embedded in many contexts, enabling different information-processing goals. Do the psychological functions of pitch patterns determine the neural mechanisms supporting their perception, or do all pitch patterns, regardless of function, engage the same mechanisms? This issue is pursued in the present study by using150-water positron emission tomography to study brain activations when two subject groups discriminate pitch patterns in their respective native languages, one of which is a tonal language and the other of which is not. In a tonal language, pitch patterns signal lexical meaning. Native Mandarin-speaking and English-speaking listeners discriminated pitch patterns embedded in Mandarin and English words and also passively listened to the same stimuli. When Mandarin listeners discriminated pitch embedded in Mandarin lexical tones, the left anterior insular cortex was the most active. When they discriminated pitch patterns embedded in English words, the homologous area in the right hemisphere activated as it did in English-speaking listeners discriminating pitch patterns embedded in either Mandarin or English words. These results support the view that neural responses to physical acoustic stimuli depend on the function of those stimuli and implicate anterior insular cortex in auditory processing, with the left insular cortex especially responsive to linguistic stimuli.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- The song system of the human brainCognitive Brain Research, 2004
- Learning new sounds of speech: reallocation of neural substratesNeuroImage, 2003
- Selective attention to lexical tones recruits left dorsal frontoparietal networkNeuroReport, 2003
- The role of insula in language: an unsettled questionAphasiology, 1999
- Interaction between Tone and Intonation in Thai after Unilateral Brain DamageBrain and Language, 1997
- MRI-PET Registration with Automated AlgorithmJournal of Computer Assisted Tomography, 1993
- A Three-Dimensional Statistical Analysis for CBF Activation Studies in Human BrainJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1992
- A Highly Accurate Method of Localizing Regions of Neuronal Activation in the Human Brain with Positron Emission TomographyJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1989
- Enhanced Detection of Focal Brain Responses Using Intersubject Averaging and Change-Distribution Analysis of Subtracted PET ImagesJournal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 1988
- On the Auditory Perception of Tones in MandarinPhonetica, 1969