(Press-News.org) Voice experiments in people with epilepsy have helped trace the circuit of electrical signals in the brain that allow its hearing center to sort out background sounds from their own voices.
Such auditory corollary discharge signals start and end in two subregions of the brain’s top folded surface, or cortex, a new study shows. One large part of the cortex, the motor cortex, is known to control the body’s voluntary muscle movements, including those involved in speech, while another large section, the auditory cortex, is known to control hearing.
In terms of evolution, the ability of animals and humans to tell one’s own calls or voices from those of others is thought to have enabled threat perception and enhanced survival. The back-and-forth, milliseconds-long electrical signals that let the brain downplay background sounds are present, for instance, as crickets rapidly tell apart their own mating chirps from the chirps of others, as songbirds sing mating songs, and as bats use reverberations of sound to negotiate their environments.
In humans, disruptions to this system are also thought to be hallmarks of auditory hallucinations, or “hearing voices,” in people with schizophrenia who cannot distinguish “real” voices from outside sounds, say the study authors. Disturbances in auditory corollary discharge signals are also thought to be involved in stuttering.
While previous experiments had tracked this electrical brain circuit to the motor cortex in mammals, the field has struggled to determine where discharge signals originate in the human motor cortex. This is partly because of the difficulty in recording brain activity while people are awake and talking, but mainly due to complexity of the computer analysis needed to analyze the recordings.
For the new study, led by researchers at NYU Langone Health, its Neuroscience Institute, and at NYU’s Tandon School of Engineering, neuroscientists conducted voice experiments in eight adults with epilepsy. All were undergoing routine surgery to determine the source of their seizures and volunteered to participate in word exercises.
Publishing in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS) online Dec. 3, the report describes how the researchers mapped auditory corollary discharge signals from the bottom, or ventral, part of the motor cortex, a subregion called the precentral gyrus. The electrical signals, lasting on average 120 milliseconds, were then found to move down and across the folds of the precentral gyrus to a neighboring auditory cortical subregion, called the superior temporal gyrus.
“We believe our study solves a long-standing puzzle in our understanding of human speech, offering the first direct evidence of the motor cortex brain circuits involved in corollary discharge that allow us to stay alert to our surroundings even while we are speaking,” said study lead investigator Amirhossein Khalilian-Gourtani, PhD. Khalilian-Gourtani is a postdoctoral research fellow in the Department of Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine.
“Our findings also provide specific insight into schizophrenia, offering an explanation for the source of auditory hallucinations, as resulting from disrupted corollary discharge between the brain’s motor and auditory cortices,” said neuroscientist Adeen Flinker, PhD, study senior investigator.
“What we and many other researchers suspect is happening in some people with schizophrenia is that they are unable to dissociate their own voice from others or even other external stimuli,” said Flinker, an associate professor in the Department of Neurology at NYU Grossman School of Medicine and NYU Tandon School of Engineering.
As part of the new study, researchers made more than 3,200 recordings of electrical brain activity while patients completed a series of voice experiments during planned breaks in their surgery. All patients had upward of 200 probes inserted into their brains to primarily monitor any seizure-related electrical activity. The research team then used a computer model to assess and predict what regions were active in the corollary discharge during speech in the word experiments designed to track the discharge.
Among the exercises, patients were asked to listen to and then repeat a word, such as “balloon;” complete a sentence with the same word when answering the question “The boy blew up a…?” and look at a picture of a balloon and describe it with the same word.
Each test required the patient to tune out what word they were hearing while still being alert to their visual and acoustic surroundings, staying focused and saying aloud the same word.
Study participants were mostly men and women in their 30s and 40s and were recorded since 2019 at NYU Langone. Researchers recorded electrical activity inside most subregions of the patients’ brains as the patients heard themselves responding to recordings of statements being read aloud by others. Such audio-feedback tests have been developed to safely study how the human brain learns and processes speech.
Flinker says the team plans tests to assess further how and whether the corollary discharge circuit is active immediately before hallucinations induced during brain stimulation. They also have plans to work with psychiatrists on noninvasive means of testing the signal in people with schizophrenia.
Funding support for the study was provided by National Science Foundation grant HS-1912286 and National Institutes of Health grants R01NS109367 and R01NS115929.
Besides Khalilian-Gourtani and Flinker, other NYU Langone and NYU Tandon researchers involved in the study are co-investigators Ran Wang, Xupeng Chen, Leyao Yu, Patricia Dugan, Daniel Friedman, Werner Doyle, Orrin Devinsky, and Yao Wang.
Media Inquiries:
David March
212-404-3528
David.March@NYULangone.org
END
Brain mapping advances understanding of human speech and hallucinations in schizophrenia
2024-12-03
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Researchers at Case Western Reserve, Mass Eye and Ear aim to prevent hearing loss by protecting inner-ear cells
2024-12-03
CLEVELAND—With a new five-year, $3.2 million grant from the National Institute on Deafness and Other Communications Disorders, researchers at Case Western Reserve University and Mass Eye and Ear will study what causes acquired hearing loss (AHL) and seek new ways to protect against it.
AHL is among the most common health conditions affecting older adults, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Although hearing aids can help, AHL has no known cure and, in many cases, scientists are still unsure of its exact cause.
AHL significantly ...
FAU receives $6 million grant to propel expansion of the FAU Marcus Institute of Integrative Health
2024-12-03
Florida Atlantic University’s Marcus Institute of Integrative Health has been awarded a monumental $6 million grant from the late Bernie Marcus and The Marcus Foundation to broaden its services, enhance educational programs, and expand community wellness initiatives, ultimately aiming to create a national model that demonstrates the effectiveness of comprehensive integrative health as the optimal approach for achieving overall well-being for everyone.
This latest grant to FAU from The Marcus Foundation, which was made prior to the passing of Marcus in early November, brings its total contributions for advancing integrative health to more than $10 million, ...
Imaging synaptic vesicles in 3D
2024-12-03
Researchers led by Uljana Kravčenko and her colleagues in the lab of Professor Misha Kudryashev, Group Leader of the In Situ Structural Biology lab at the Max Delbrück Center, have revealed new features of the molecular architecture of synaptic vesicles. Using cryo-electron tomography, the team was able to visualize SVs in 3D and confirm a potentially important protein-protein interaction. They also broadened our understanding of SV function and of how the vesicles are recycled. The study was published in the Proceedings ...
New hydrogel could preserve waterlogged wood from shipwrecks
2024-12-03
From the RMS Titanic to the SS Endurance, shipwrecks offer valuable — yet swiftly deteriorating — windows into the past. Conservators slowly dry marine wooden artifacts to preserve them but doing so can inflict damage. To better care for delicate marine artifacts, researchers in ACS Sustainable Chemistry & Engineering developed a new hydrogel that quickly neutralizes harmful acids and stabilized waterlogged wood from an 800-year-old shipwreck.
Wooden artifacts from shipwrecks are drenched with seawater, an environment that enables acid-producing ...
Studies of misinformation risk inculcating false beliefs without proper debriefs
2024-12-03
To study the effects of misinformation on attitudes, some social science experiments expose participants to false, misleading, or dangerous information. Most Institutional Review Boards require that such studies be followed by a debriefing session, in which participants are told that the information that was presented was not true. Katherine Clayton and colleagues sought to determine whether these debriefs can “undo” the effects of exposure to misinformation. The authors first replicated existing misinformation ...
Experts on aging disagree on the causes and definition of aging
2024-12-03
Vadim N. Gladyshev and 80 colleagues surveyed the participants of the 2022 Systems Aging Gordon Research Conference to explore how researchers of aging perceive their subject of study. The authors found wide disagreement on fundamental questions, including “what is aging?” and “what causes aging?”. The collected responses indicated that some of the 103 professors, postdocs, graduate students, industry professionals, and other experts in the survey saw aging as a demographic increase in mortality rate, while other respondents saw aging as a loss of function over time, while still other respondents saw aging as the accumulation of damage ...
Regional, racial, and economic disparities in cancer risk from air pollution exposure persist, but improving, new research suggests
2024-12-03
New research builds on scientific understanding of how air pollution and cancer risk are distributed throughout the U.S. Air pollution, often resulting from industrial or vehicle emissions, can travel for hundreds of miles and impact the health of communities through higher rates of asthma, respiratory infections, stroke, and lung cancer. Although previous studies have identified disparities in how public health risks vary by income and race, a new study takes a detailed look across U.S. census tracts to find patterns in who is most at risk from cancer resulting from lifetime exposure to air pollution and how ...
COVID infection and age-related blindness
2024-12-03
An experimental study in mice shows that SARS-CoV-2 infection can damage the retinas, with long-term implications for vision. Post-acute sequelae of SARS-CoV-2 infection include various neurocognitive symptoms, suggesting the virus can affect the central nervous system. The eyes are also part of the central nervous system, but little is known about the virus’s effects on these organs. David Williams and Nan Hultgren led a study in which transgenic mice that express human SARS-CoV-2 receptor ACE2 were infected with ...
Parasite-inspired medical devices
2024-12-03
Inspired by the diverse attachment organs of parasites, researchers have designed a millimeter-scale mechanism for soft tissue anchoring. Robert J. Wood and colleagues turned to the world of parasites as inspiration for developing methods to affix small-scale medical devices to the gastrointestinal tract or other soft tissues for sensing, sample collection, and extended drug release. While evolution has produced a wide range of different biomechanical structures that can attach to soft tissues, the authors ...
Twenty-seven scientists become EMBO Young Investigators
2024-12-03
3 December 2024 – EMBO announces the selection of 27 life scientists as the newest members of the EMBO Young Investigator Programme. The programme supports young group leaders in Europe and beyond. The new young investigators will start in January, be active members of the programme for four years, and become part of an international network of nearly 800 current and former EMBO Young Investigators, Installation Grantees and Global Investigators. They carry out research across a wide range of life sciences topics from cell and computational biology to immunology and neuroscience.
"EMBO welcomes ...