Abstract

The dynamics of the interregional interaction of cortical areas was studied in adult test subjects who accomplished the tasks of listening to and memorizing a poem and of mental arithmetic. Analysis of the spatial and temporal relations of the oscillations of the brain biopotentials showed the participation of many regions of the left and right hemispheres in the verbal–mnestic activity. The interaction was most expressed between the posterior regions of the left hemisphere and the anterior regions of the right one. To find out whether these data agree with the classical concepts on the leading role of the left hemisphere in speech activity, the authors examined 3- and 4-year-old children with motor alalia. A comparison of 3-year-old alalics with the control group of healthy children of the same age demonstrated a marked weakening of the distant interaction of the activity of the ipsilateral antero- and posterotemporal regions of the left hemisphere (i.e., those that correspond to the Broca area and Wernicke zone) both between themselves and with the activity of other cortical regions of both hemispheres. These results confirm the important role of both the inter- and intrahemispheric relations, especially those between the Broca area and the Wernicke zone, in realizing verbal–mnestic functions. A significant weakening of the systemic interaction between EEG oscillations in these areas in alalic children suggests that the auditory feedback plays a special role during speech production in the ontogenetic development of the neurophysiological mechanisms that are responsible for speech function formation.

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