Abstract

Most functional MRI studies of language processing have focussed on group-level inference, but for clinical use, the aim is to predict outcomes at an individual patient level. This requires being able to identify atypical activation and understand how differences relate to language outcomes. A language mapping paradigm that selectively activates left hemisphere language regions in healthy individuals allows atypical activation in a patient to be more easily identified. We investigated the interindividual variability and consistency of language activation in 12 healthy participants using three tasks—verb generation, responsive naming, and sentence comprehension—for future presurgical use. Responsive naming produced the most consistent left-lateralised activation across participants in frontal and temporal regions that postsurgical voxel-based lesion-symptom mapping studies suggest are most critical for language outcomes. Studies with a long-term clinical aim of predicting language outcomes in neurosurgical patients and stroke patients should first establish paradigm validity at an individual level in healthy participants.

Full Text
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