Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks

<p>Background: Relative blood flow in the two middle cerebral arteries can be measured using functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) to give an index of lateralisation as participants perform a specific task. Language laterality has mostly been studied with fTCD using a word generati...

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Main Authors: Woodhead, Z, Rutherford, H, Bishop, D
Format: Journal article
Published: F1000Research 2018
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author Woodhead, Z
Rutherford, H
Bishop, D
author_facet Woodhead, Z
Rutherford, H
Bishop, D
author_sort Woodhead, Z
collection OXFORD
description <p>Background: Relative blood flow in the two middle cerebral arteries can be measured using functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) to give an index of lateralisation as participants perform a specific task. Language laterality has mostly been studied with fTCD using a word generation task, but it is not clear whether this is optimal.</p><p> Methods: Using fTCD, we evaluated a sentence generation task that has shown good reliability and strong left lateralisation in fMRI. We interleaved trials of word generation, sentence generation and list generation and assessed agreement of these tasks in 31 participants (29 right-handers).</p><p> Results: Although word generation and sentence generation both gave robust left-lateralisation, Bland-Altman analysis showed that these two methods were not equivalent. The comparison list generation task was not systematically lateralised, but nevertheless laterality indices (LIs) from this task were significantly correlated with the other two tasks. Subtracting list generation LI from sentence generation LI did not affect the strength of the laterality index.</p><p> Conclusions: This was a pre-registered methodological study designed to explore novel approaches to optimising measurement of language lateralisation using fTCD. It confirmed that sentence generation gives robust left lateralisation in most people, but is not equivalent to the classic word generation task. Although list generation does not show left-lateralisation at the group level, the LI on this task was correlated with left-lateralised tasks. This suggests that word and sentence generation involve adding a constant directional bias to an underlying continuum of laterality that is reliable in individuals but not biased in either direction. In future research we suggest that consistency of laterality across tasks might have more functional significance than strength or direction of laterality on any one task.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:230f6543-2811-42a9-aa55-e36ca6d992b72022-03-26T11:42:09ZMeasurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasksJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:230f6543-2811-42a9-aa55-e36ca6d992b7Symplectic Elements at OxfordF1000Research2018Woodhead, ZRutherford, HBishop, D<p>Background: Relative blood flow in the two middle cerebral arteries can be measured using functional transcranial Doppler sonography (fTCD) to give an index of lateralisation as participants perform a specific task. Language laterality has mostly been studied with fTCD using a word generation task, but it is not clear whether this is optimal.</p><p> Methods: Using fTCD, we evaluated a sentence generation task that has shown good reliability and strong left lateralisation in fMRI. We interleaved trials of word generation, sentence generation and list generation and assessed agreement of these tasks in 31 participants (29 right-handers).</p><p> Results: Although word generation and sentence generation both gave robust left-lateralisation, Bland-Altman analysis showed that these two methods were not equivalent. The comparison list generation task was not systematically lateralised, but nevertheless laterality indices (LIs) from this task were significantly correlated with the other two tasks. Subtracting list generation LI from sentence generation LI did not affect the strength of the laterality index.</p><p> Conclusions: This was a pre-registered methodological study designed to explore novel approaches to optimising measurement of language lateralisation using fTCD. It confirmed that sentence generation gives robust left lateralisation in most people, but is not equivalent to the classic word generation task. Although list generation does not show left-lateralisation at the group level, the LI on this task was correlated with left-lateralised tasks. This suggests that word and sentence generation involve adding a constant directional bias to an underlying continuum of laterality that is reliable in individuals but not biased in either direction. In future research we suggest that consistency of laterality across tasks might have more functional significance than strength or direction of laterality on any one task.</p>
spellingShingle Woodhead, Z
Rutherford, H
Bishop, D
Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title_full Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title_fullStr Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title_full_unstemmed Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title_short Measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial Doppler ultrasound: a comparison of different tasks
title_sort measurement of language laterality using functional transcranial doppler ultrasound a comparison of different tasks
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AT rutherfordh measurementoflanguagelateralityusingfunctionaltranscranialdopplerultrasoundacomparisonofdifferenttasks
AT bishopd measurementoflanguagelateralityusingfunctionaltranscranialdopplerultrasoundacomparisonofdifferenttasks