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Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in sensory evoked responses coincide with rapid improvement in speech identification performance

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TLDR
Rapid physiological changes in the human auditory system that coincide with learning during a 1-hour test session in which participants learned to identify two consonant vowel syllables that differed in voice onset time are reported.
Abstract
Perceptual learning is sometimes characterized by rapid improvements in performance within the first hour of training (fast perceptual learning), which may be accompanied by changes in sensory and/or response pathways. Here, we report rapid physiological changes in the human auditory system that coincide with learning during a 1-hour test session in which participants learned to identify two consonant vowel syllables that differed in voice onset time. Within each block of trials, listeners were also presented with a broadband noise control stimulus to determine whether changes in auditory evoked potentials were specific to the trained speech cue. The ability to identify the speech sounds improved from the first to the fourth block of trials and remained relatively constant thereafter. This behavioral improvement coincided with a decrease in N1 and P2 amplitude, and these learning-related changes differed from those observed for the noise stimulus. These training-induced changes in sensory evoked responses were followed by an increased negative peak (between 275 and 330 msec) over fronto-central sites and by an increase in sustained activity over the parietal regions. Although the former was also observed for the noise stimulus, the latter was specific to the speech sounds. The results are consistent with a top-down nonspecific attention effect on neural activity during learning as well as a more learning-specific modulation, which is coincident with behavioral improvements in speech identification.

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Citations
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Coordinated plasticity in brainstem and auditory cortex contributes to enhanced categorical speech perception in musicians.

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Is the auditory evoked P2 response a biomarker of learning

TL;DR: The main finding was that the amplitude of the P1-N1-P2 auditory evoked response increased across repeated EEG sessions for all groups, regardless of any change in perceptual performance.
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Perceptual learning of degraded speech by minimizing prediction error

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Playing Music for a Smarter Ear: Cognitive, Perceptual and Neurobiological Evidence

TL;DR: This review argues not only that common neural mechanisms for speech and music exist, but that experience in music leads to enhancements in sensory and cognitive contributors to speech processing, including reading and hearing speech in background noise.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Central auditory plasticity: changes in the N1-P2 complex after speech-sound training.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the N1-P2 complex may have clinical applications as an objective physiologic correlate of speech-sound representation associated with speech- sound training.
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Timbre-specific enhancement of auditory cortical representations in musicians.

TL;DR: In this paper, auditory cortical representations measured neuromagnetically for tones of different timbre (violin and trumpet) are enhanced compared to sine tones in violinists and trumpeters, preferentially for timbres of the instrument of training.
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Classical conditioning induces CS-specific receptive field plasticity in the auditory cortex of the guinea pig

TL;DR: The findings indicate that associative processes produce systematic modification of the auditory system's processing of frequency information and exemplify the advantages of combining receptive field analysis with behavioral training in the study of the neural bases of learning and memory.
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Enhancement of Neuroplastic P2 and N1c Auditory Evoked Potentials in Musicians

TL;DR: The results suggest that the tuning properties of neurons are modified in distributed regions of the auditory cortex in accordance with the acoustic training history (musical- or laboratory-based) of the subject.
Journal ArticleDOI

The time course of auditory perceptual learning: neurophysiological changes during speech-sound training.

TL;DR: It is reported that training-associated changes in neural activity can precede behavioral learning, suggesting that speech-sound learning occurs at a pre-attentive level which can be measured neurophysiologically (in the absence of a behavioral response) to assess the efficacy of training.
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