Species-specific calls evoke asymmetric activity in the monkey's temporal poles
Amy Poremba (),
Megan Malloy,
Richard C. Saunders,
Richard E. Carson,
Peter Herscovitch and
Mortimer Mishkin
Additional contact information
Amy Poremba: University of Iowa
Megan Malloy: National Institute of Mental Health
Richard C. Saunders: National Institute of Mental Health
Richard E. Carson: Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health
Peter Herscovitch: Clinical Center, National Institutes of Health
Mortimer Mishkin: National Institute of Mental Health
Nature, 2004, vol. 427, issue 6973, 448-451
Abstract:
Abstract It has often been proposed that the vocal calls of monkeys are precursors of human speech, in part because they provide critical information to other members of the species who rely on them for survival and social interactions1,2. Both behavioural and lesion studies suggest that monkeys, like humans, use the auditory system of the left hemisphere preferentially to process vocalizations3,4. To investigate the pattern of neural activity that might underlie this particular form of functional asymmetry in monkeys, we measured local cerebral metabolic activity while the animals listened passively to species-specific calls compared with a variety of other classes of sound. Within the superior temporal gyrus, significantly greater metabolic activity occurred on the left side than on the right, only in the region of the temporal pole and only in response to monkey calls. This functional asymmetry was absent when these regions were separated by forebrain commissurotomy, suggesting that the perception of vocalizations elicits concurrent interhemispheric interactions that focus the auditory processing within a specialized area of one hemisphere.
Date: 2004
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:nat:nature:v:427:y:2004:i:6973:d:10.1038_nature02268
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DOI: 10.1038/nature02268
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