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Brain Advance Access published online on February 23, 2005

Brain, doi:10.1093/brain/awh465
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org
Received August 28, 2004
Revised January 8, 2005
Accepted January 21, 2005

Article

Sign and speech: amodal commonality in left hemisphere dominance for comprehension of sentences

Kuniyoshi L. Sakai 1*, Yoshinori Tatsuno 1, Kei Suzuki 2, Harumi Kimura 3, and Yasuhiro Ichida 3

1 Department of Basic Science, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Komaba, Tokyo, Japan; CREST, Japan Science and Technology Agency, Kawaguchi-shi, Japan
2 Department of Basic Science, Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Komaba, Tokyo, Japan
3 National Rehabilitation Center for the Disabled, Tokorozawa-shi, Japan

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Kuniyoshi L. Sakai, E-mail: sakai{at}mind.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp


   Abstract

Summary The neural basis of functional lateralization in language processing is a fundamental issue in systems neuroscience. We used functional MRI (fMRI) to examine hemispheric dominance during the processing of signed and spoken sentences. By using tasks involving comprehension of sentences (Sc) and sentential non-word detection (Sn), we compared different groups and stimulus conditions. Under the sign condition with sentence stimuli in Japanese Sign Language (JSL), we tested two groups of subjects: Deaf signers (Deaf) of JSL, and hearing bilinguals (children of Deaf adults, CODA) of JSL and Japanese (JPN). Under the speech condition, we tested hearing monolinguals (Mono) of JPN with auditory JPN stimuli alone (AUD), or with an audiovisual presentation of JPN and JSL stimuli (A&V). We found that the overall bilateral activation patterns under the four experimental conditions of Deaf, CODA, AUD and A&V were almost identical, despite differences in stimuli (JSL and JPN) and groups (Deaf, CODA and Mono). Moreover, consistently left-dominant activations involving frontal and temporo-parietal regions were observed across all four conditions. Furthermore, irrespective of the modalities of sign and speech, the main effects of task (Sc-Sn) were found primarily in the left regions: the ventral part of the inferior frontal gyrus (F3t/F3O), the precentral sulcus, the superior frontal gyrus, the middle temporal gyrus, the angular gyrus and the inferior parietal gyrus. Among these regions, only the left F3t/F3O showed no main effects of modality condition. These results demonstrate amodal commonality in the functional dominance of the left cortical regions for comprehension of sentences, as well as the essential and universal role of the left F3t/F3O in processing linguistic information from both signed and spoken sentences.

Keywords: deaf; sign language; speech; functional lateralization; frontal cortex.
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