Brains of people who stammer since childhood show evidence of rewiring between the left and right brain, a new study has found.
Brains of people who stammer since childhood show evidence of "rewiring" between the left and right brain, a new study has found. The study found that the human brain has the ability to reorganise itself in a profound way, and now a team of research scientists say they have shown that auditory-motor integration is located in a different part of the brain of people who stammer, the Daily Mail reported.
The team of Dr. Nicole Neef and Dr. Martin Sommer from the University of Goettingen and Dr. Bettina Pollok from the University of Duesseldorf studied the performance of a group of adults who stutter, alongside a control group of adults who do not, in a finger tapping exercise.
The scientists used Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) to interfere temporarily with brain activity during the experiment.
TMS is a non-invasive method of interrupting the activity of neurons, which allows scientists to study the functioning, and interconnections of the brain.
In control subjects, disturbing the left premotor cortex with TMS impaired the finger tapping, but disturbing the right premotor cortex had no effect.
But in stuttering adults, the pattern was reversed. In other words the accuracy of finger tapping was affected by disturbing the right hemisphere, and unaffected when disturbing the left.
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The team claims that this experiment provides further evidence that in adults who have stuttered since childhood, the processes of auditory-motor integration are located in a different part of the brain to those in adults who do not stutter.
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The findings are reported in the September 2011 issue of Elsevier's Cortex, an international journal devoted to the study of cognition and of the relationship between the nervous system and mental processes.
Source-ANI