The cortical regions and white matter tracts underlying auditory comprehension in patients with primary brain tumor

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Abstract

The comprehension of spoken language is one of the most essential language functions in humans. However, the neurological underpinnings of auditory comprehension remain under debate. Here we used multi-modal neuroimaging analyses on a group of patients with low-grade gliomas to localize cortical regions and white matter tracts responsible for auditory language comprehension. Region-of-interests and voxel-level whole-brain analyses showed that cortical areas in the posterior temporal lobe are crucial for language comprehension. The fiber integrity assessed with diffusion tensor imaging of the arcuate fasciculus and the inferior longitudinal fasciculus was strongly correlated with both auditory comprehension and the grey matter volume of the inferior temporal and middle temporal gyri. Together, our findings provide direct evidence for an integrated network of auditory comprehension whereby the superior temporal gyrus and sulcus, the posterior parts of the middle and inferior temporal gyri serve as auditory comprehension cortex, and the arcuate fasciculus and the inferior longitudinal fasciculus subserve as crucial structural connectivity. These findings provide critical evidence on the neural underpinnings of language comprehension.

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Zhang, J., Yao, Y., Wu, J. song, Rolls, E. T., Sun, C. chen, Bu, L. hao, … Zhou, L. fu. (2023). The cortical regions and white matter tracts underlying auditory comprehension in patients with primary brain tumor. Human Brain Mapping, 44(4), 1603–1616. https://doi.org/10.1002/hbm.26161

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