Abstract
The aim of this experiment was to investigate the effects of speech on the excitability of corticospinal pathways to human hand muscles. Single transcranial magnetic stimuli were given randomly over the hand area of either the left or right motor cortex of 10 right-handed normal volunteers. Electromyographic responses were recorded in the relaxed first dorsal interosseous muscle while the subjects a : read aloud a piece of text, b : read silently, c : spoke spontaneously, or d : made sounds without speaking. The only consistent effect across subjects occurred during task a, which significantly increased the size of responses evoked in the dominant hand of all subjects, but had either no effect (8 subjects) or a smaller effect in the nondominant hand. Tasks b and d had no reliable effect, whereas task c tended to increase response size in both hands. Control measurements suggest that the effects in task a were caused by changes in cortical rather than spinal excitability. This is the first demonstration of lateralized speech effects on the excitability of cortical arm areas. We assume that the results provide a useful adjunct to other tests for determination of cerebral dominance, using only single-rather repetitive-pulse cortical stimulation.