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Speech-associated gestures, Broca’s area, and the human mirror system
Authors:Jeremy I Skipper  Susan Goldin-Meadow  Howard C Nusbaum  Steven L Small  
Institution:aDepartment of Psychology, The University of Chicago, USA;bDepartment of Neurology, MC 2030, and the Brain Research Imaging Center, The University of Chicago, 5841 South Maryland Ave., Chicago, IL 60637, USA
Abstract:Speech-associated gestures are hand and arm movements that not only convey semantic information to listeners but are themselves actions. Broca’s area has been assumed to play an important role both in semantic retrieval or selection (as part of a language comprehension system) and in action recognition (as part of a “mirror” or “observation–execution matching” system). We asked whether the role that Broca’s area plays in processing speech-associated gestures is consistent with the semantic retrieval/selection account (predicting relatively weak interactions between Broca’s area and other cortical areas because the meaningful information that speech-associated gestures convey reduces semantic ambiguity and thus reduces the need for semantic retrieval/selection) or the action recognition account (predicting strong interactions between Broca’s area and other cortical areas because speech-associated gestures are goal-direct actions that are “mirrored”). We compared the functional connectivity of Broca’s area with other cortical areas when participants listened to stories while watching meaningful speech-associated gestures, speech-irrelevant self-grooming hand movements, or no hand movements. A network analysis of neuroimaging data showed that interactions involving Broca’s area and other cortical areas were weakest when spoken language was accompanied by meaningful speech-associated gestures, and strongest when spoken language was accompanied by self-grooming hand movements or by no hand movements at all. Results are discussed with respect to the role that the human mirror system plays in processing speech-associated movements.
Keywords:Language  Gesture  Face  The motor system  Premotor cortex  Broca’  s area  Pars opercularis  Pars triangularis  Mirror neurons  The human mirror system  Action recognition  Action understanding  Structural equation models
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