Abstract

The assessment of language lateralization has become widely used when planning neurosurgery close to language areas, due to individual specificities and potential influence of brain pathology. Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) allows non-invasive and quantitative assessment of language lateralization for presurgical planning using a laterality index (LI). However, the conventional method is limited by the dependence of the LI on the chosen activation threshold. To overcome this limitation, different threshold-independent LI calculations have been reported. The purpose of this study was to propose a simplified approach to threshold-independent LI calculation and compare it with three previously reported methods on the same cohort of subjects. Fifteen healthy subjects, who performed picture naming, verb generation, and word fluency tasks, were scanned. LI values were calculated for all subjects using four methods, and considering either the whole hemisphere or an atlas-defined language area. For each method, the subjects were ranked according to the calculated LI values, and the obtained rankings were compared. All LI calculation methods agreed in differentiating strong from weak lateralization on both hemispheric and regional scales (Spearman's correlation coefficients 0.59-1.00). In general, a more lateralized activation was found in the language area than in the whole hemisphere. The new method is well suited for application in the clinical practice as it is simple to implement, fast, and robust. The good agreement between LI calculation methods suggests that the choice of method is not key. Nevertheless, it should be consistent to allow a relative comparison of language lateralization between subjects.

Highlights

  • In the majority of individuals, language functions are predominantly located in the left brain hemisphere [1]

  • The 95% confidence interval of the mean laterality index (LI) is larger for the picture naming task than for the two other tasks, indicating that the differences between subjects are greater for this task

  • Our results show that the choice of method itself is not key, as all methods agree in differentiating strong from weak lateralization on both hemispheric and regional scales

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Summary

Introduction

In the majority of individuals, language functions are predominantly located in the left brain hemisphere [1]. We have provided the curveLI ‘mean’ and ‘95% confidence interval’ curves for all tasks and ROIs shown in Fig 4 as data points (supplementary data S2 Table). These define and summarize our reference cohort, and can be used for future single subject or cohort comparisons. All these raw data constitute the results from this research

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