Sensorimotor mechanisms in speech motor control.

Number 1008
Year 1991
Drawer 19
Entry Date 06/30/1998
Authors Gracco, Vincent.
Contact
Publication Speech Motor Control and Stuttering, edited by Peters, Hulstijn and Starkweather, editors, Elsevier Sciene Publishers B.V.
url http://www.haskins.yale.edu/Reprints/HL1008.pdf
Abstract A conceptual model of speech motor control is developed in which the elemental units for speech are sound-producing coordinated movements of the vocal tract. The perspective taken is that the degrees of control freedom are at a systems level; in the operation of the processes that implement the speech motor action. Speech motor control is conceptualized as a multistage parallel process in which vocal tract specifications are activated by central motor commands which interact with a central rhythmic output to produce serial coordinated movements that generate sound. Vocal tract specifications include the selection of characteristic neuromotor patterns, which map isomorphically onto the phonemes of the language. Coordination of the contributing movements and on-line spatial adjustments within and among vocal tract structures are inherent in the neuromotor patterning and activation processes, respectively. The elemental units are retrievable elements stored in the central nervous system and instantiated by the directed action of the posterior parietal cortex. Two major brain systems (basal ganglia-supplementary motor area and the cerebellar-premotor) are proposed to play major roles in implementing neuromotor specifications by modulating the characteristic patterns and the sequencing their actions into larger meaningful units of production. It is the action and interaction of these senorimotor mechanisms that result in the speech motor patterns characteristic of human verbal communication.
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