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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Neural coding of continuous speech in auditory cortex during monaural and dichotic listening

Nai Ding, +1 more
- 01 Jan 2012 - 
- Vol. 107, Iss: 1, pp 78-89
TLDR
These findings characterize how the spectrotemporal features of speech are encoded in human auditory cortex and establish a single-trial-based paradigm to study the neural basis underlying the cocktail party phenomenon.
Abstract
The cortical representation of the acoustic features of continuous speech is the foundation of speech perception. In this study, noninvasive magnetoencephalography (MEG) recordings are obtained from human subjects actively listening to spoken narratives, in both simple and cocktail party-like auditory scenes. By modeling how acoustic features of speech are encoded in ongoing MEG activity as a spectrotemporal response function, we demonstrate that the slow temporal modulations of speech in a broad spectral region are represented bilaterally in auditory cortex by a phase-locked temporal code. For speech presented monaurally to either ear, this phase-locked response is always more faithful in the right hemisphere, but with a shorter latency in the hemisphere contralateral to the stimulated ear. When different spoken narratives are presented to each ear simultaneously (dichotic listening), the resulting cortical neural activity precisely encodes the acoustic features of both of the spoken narratives, but slightly weakened and delayed compared with the monaural response. Critically, the early sensory response to the attended speech is considerably stronger than that to the unattended speech, demonstrating top-down attentional gain control. This attentional gain is substantial even during the subjects' very first exposure to the speech mixture and therefore largely independent of knowledge of the speech content. Together, these findings characterize how the spectrotemporal features of speech are encoded in human auditory cortex and establish a single-trial-based paradigm to study the neural basis underlying the cocktail party phenomenon.

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Citations
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Attention, awareness, and the perception of auditory scenes.

TL;DR: Research has shown that auditory scene analysis tasks can exhibit multistability in a manner very similar to ambiguous visual stimuli, presenting a unique opportunity to study neural correlates of auditory awareness and the extent to which mechanisms of perception are shared across sensory modalities.
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Eye Can Hear Clearly Now: Inverse Effectiveness in Natural Audiovisual Speech Processing Relies on Long-Term Crossmodal Temporal Integration.

TL;DR: This work examines this in the human brain using natural speech-in-noise stimuli that were designed specifically to maximize the behavioral benefit of audiovisual (AV) speech to find that this benefit arises from the ability to integrate multimodal information over longer periods of time.
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EEG-Informed Attended Speaker Extraction From Recorded Speech Mixtures With Application in Neuro-Steered Hearing Prostheses

TL;DR: A first proof of concept for EEG-informed attended speaker extraction and denoising is provided, showing that AAD-based speaker extraction from microphone array recordings is feasible and robust, even in noisy acoustic environments, and without access to the clean speech signals to perform EEG-based AAD.
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Lip movements entrain the observers' low-frequency brain oscillations to facilitate speech intelligibility.

TL;DR: Using MEG, this work investigated coherence between oscillatory brain activity and speaker’s lip movements and demonstrated significant entrainment in visual cortex, and identified a significant partial coherence that directly predicted comprehension accuracy.
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Linguistic Bias Modulates Interpretation of Speech via Neural Delta-Band Oscillations

TL;DR: An internal linguistic bias for grouping words into phrases can modulate the interpretational impact of speech prosody via delta-band oscillatory phase, which should surface in delta- band oscillations when grouping patterns chosen by comprehenders differ from those indicated by prosody.
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Journal ArticleDOI

The cortical organization of speech processing

TL;DR: A dual-stream model of speech processing is outlined that assumes that the ventral stream is largely bilaterally organized — although there are important computational differences between the left- and right-hemisphere systems — and that the dorsal stream is strongly left- Hemisphere dominant.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: Nearly perfect speech recognition was observed under conditions of greatly reduced spectral information; the presentation of a dynamic temporal pattern in only a few broad spectral regions is sufficient for the recognition of speech.
Journal ArticleDOI

Electrical Signs of Selective Attention in the Human Brain

TL;DR: Auditory evoked potentials were recorded from the vertex of subjects who listened selectively to a series of tone pipping in one ear and ignored concurrent tone pips in the other ear to study the response set established to recognize infrequent, higher pitched tone pipped in the attended series.
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