Neuronal Circuits Supporting Development of Visual Naming Revealed by Intracranial Coherence Modulations

Improvement in visual naming abilities throughout the childhood and adolescence supports development of higher-order linguistic skills. We investigated neuronal circuits underlying improvement in the speed of visual naming with age, and age-related dynamics of these circuits. Response times were ele...

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Veröffentlicht in:Frontiers in neuroscience Jg. 16; S. 867021
Hauptverfasser: Arya, Ravindra, Ervin, Brian, Buroker, Jason, Greiner, Hansel M., Byars, Anna W., Rozhkov, Leonid, Skoch, Jesse, Horn, Paul S., Frink, Clayton, Scholle, Craig, Leach, James L., Mangano, Francesco T., Glauser, Tracy A., Holland, Katherine D.
Format: Journal Article
Sprache:Englisch
Veröffentlicht: Switzerland Frontiers Media S.A 19.05.2022
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ISSN:1662-453X, 1662-4548, 1662-453X
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Zusammenfassung:Improvement in visual naming abilities throughout the childhood and adolescence supports development of higher-order linguistic skills. We investigated neuronal circuits underlying improvement in the speed of visual naming with age, and age-related dynamics of these circuits. Response times were electronically measured during an overt visual naming task in epilepsy patients undergoing stereo-EEG monitoring. Coherence modulations among pairs of neuroanatomic parcels were computed and analyzed for relationship with response time and age. During the overt visual naming task, mean response time (latency) significantly decreased from 4 to 23 years of age. Coherence modulations during visual naming showed that increased connectivity between certain brain regions, particularly that between left fusiform gyrus/left parahippocampal gyrus and left frontal operculum, is associated with improvement in naming speed. Also, decreased connectivity in other brain regions, particularly between left angular and supramarginal gyri, is associated with decreased mean response time. Further, coherence modulations between left frontal operculum and both left fusiform and left posterior cingulate gyri significantly increase, while that between left angular and supramarginal gyri significantly decrease, with age. Naming speed continues to improve from pre-school years into young adulthood. This age-related improvement in efficiency of naming environmental objects occurs likely because of strengthened direct connectivity between semantic and phonological nodes, and elimination of intermediate higher-order cognitive steps.
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Reviewed by: Dennis Spencer, Yale New Haven Health System, United States; Naoki Ikegaya, Yokohama City University, Japan; Hidenori Sugano, Juntendo University, Japan
Edited by: Yingying Wang, University of Nebraska-Lincoln, United States
This article was submitted to Neurodevelopment, a section of the journal Frontiers in Neuroscience
ISSN:1662-453X
1662-4548
1662-453X
DOI:10.3389/fnins.2022.867021