Research of cerebral activation in Uygur-speaking and Chinese-speaking participants during verb generation task with functional magnetic resonance imaging.

Medicine (Baltimore)

Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, The First Affiliation Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University, Urumqi P.R. China Program of Communication Disorders, Department of Allied Professions, North Carolina Central University, Durham, NC Center of Imaging, The First Affiliation Hospital of Xinjiang Medical University, Urumqi Electrical and Information Engineering, Sichuan University, Chengdu, P.R. China.

Published: July 2017

The aims are to investigate and compare the activated cerebral regions of Uygur-speaking and Chinese-speaking participants during verb generation task.A total of 31 cases of Uygur and 28 cases of Han healthy volunteers were enrolled. They were requested to take verb generation tasks. Blood oxygenation level-dependent functional magnetic resonance imaging (BOLD-fMRI) was performed. The fMRI images were collected and activated brain regions were analyzed.In Chinese-speaking participants, the main activated cerebral regions were as follows: the left caudate nucleus, the left occipital gyrus, the left fusiform gyrus, bilateral supplementary motor area (BA8/ 6), the left BA32, left precuneus, the left superior parietal lobule, the left inferior parietal lobule (BA7), the left angular gyrus, the right side of the central gyrus (BA9), the left inferior frontal gyrus triangular section, the right pars opercularis gyri frontalis inferiorista, and bilateral cerebellum. In Uygur-speaking subjects, the main activated cerebral regions included left precentral gyrus (BA9 region), inferior frontal gyrus of left opercular part, inferior frontal gyrus of left triangle part, and left cerebellum. Left caudate nucleus, left orbital frontal gyrus, right caudate nucleus, and bilateral anterior cingulate gyrus (BA32 region) of Chinese group were significantly activated compared with Uygur group. By contrast, Uygur group showed no region that was more activated than Chinese group.The present study demonstrates that activated brain regions in verb generation tasks are different between Uygur and Chinese languages. Processing of Uygur characters is mainly in the left hemisphere of the brain, while the processing of Chinese characters needs more participation by the right hemisphere of the brain.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5627813PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MD.0000000000007460DOI Listing

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