ABSTRACT
Basal ganglia-thalamocortical loops mediate all motor behavior, yet little detail is known about the role of basal ganglia nuclei in speech production. Using intracranial recording during deep brain stimulation surgery, we tested the hypothesis that the firing rate of subthalamic nucleus neurons is modulated in response to both planning and motor execution aspects of speech. Nearly half of 79 recorded units exhibited firing rate modulation, during a syllable reading task administered in 12 subjects. Trial-to-trial timing of changes in subthalamic neuronal activity, relative to cue onset versus production onset, revealed that locking to cue presentation was associated more with units that decreased firing rate, while locking to speech onset was associated more with units that increased firing rate. These uniquely acquired data indicate that subthalamic activity is dynamic during the production of speech, reflecting temporally-dependent inhibition and excitation of separate populations of subthalamic neurons.