Evolution of the speech‐ready brain: The voice/jaw connection in the human motor cortex

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Evolution of the speech‐ready brain: The voice/jaw connection in the human motor cortex
Abstract
A prominent model of the origins of speech, known as the “frame/content” theory, posits that oscillatory lowering and raising of the jaw provided an evolutionary scaffold for the development of syllable structure in speech. Because such oscillations are non‐vocal in most non‐human primates, the evolution of speech required the addition of vocalization onto this scaffold in order to turn such jaw oscillations into vocalized syllables. In the present functional MRI study, we demonstrate overlapping somatotopic representations between the larynx and the jaw muscles in the human primary motor cortex. This proximity between the larynx and jaw in the brain might support the coupling between vocalization and jaw oscillations to generate syllable structure. This model suggests that humans inherited voluntary control of jaw oscillations from ancestral species, but added voluntary control of vocalization onto this via the evolution of a new brain area that came to be situated near the jaw region in the human motor cortex.
Version
5
Date
17/08/2020, 00:00
Repository
Dryad
Citation Key
brown.etal_2020
Accessed
21/05/2025, 13:29
Short Title
Evolution of the speech‐ready brain
Language
en
Library Catalog
DOI.org (Datacite)
License
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
Extra
Artwork Size: 5207903651 bytes Pages: 5207903651 bytes
Citation
Brown, S., Yuan, Y., & Belyk, M. (2020). Evolution of the speech‐ready brain: The voice/jaw connection in the human motor cortex (Version 5) [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/DRYAD.NP5HQBZPM
Speech Production Data