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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Time Course of Top-down and Bottom-up Influences on Syllable Processing in the Auditory Cortex

TLDR
Track the neural time course of syllable processing with magnetoencephalography shows that this continuous construction of meaning-based representations is aided by both top-down and bottom-up cues in the speech signal.
Abstract
In speech perception, extraction of meaning from complex streams of sounds is surprisingly fast and efficient. By tracking the neural time course of syllable processing with magnetoencephalography we show that this continuous construction of meaning-based representations is aided by both top-down (context-based) expectations and bottom-up (acoustic--phonetic) cues in the speech signal. Syllables elicited a sustained response at 200--600 ms (N400m) which became most similar to that evoked by words when the expectation for meaningful speech was increased by presenting the syllables among words and sentences or using sentence-initial syllables. This word-like cortical processing of meaningless syllables emerged at the build-up of the N400m response, 200--300 ms after speech onset, during the transition from perceptual to lexical--semantic analysis. These findings show that the efficiency of meaning-based analysis of speech is subserved by a cortical system finely tuned to lexically relevant acousticphonetic and contextual cues.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Are there interactive processes in speech perception

TL;DR: It is argued that evidence supporting the prediction of interactive models that lexical influences can affect pre-lexical mechanisms, triggering compensation, adaptation and retuning of phonological processes generally taken to be pre-Lexical points to interactive processing as a fundamental principle for perception of speech and other modalities.
Journal ArticleDOI

Clinical neurophysiology of language: the MEG approach.

TL;DR: Development of approaches for more comprehensive pre-surgical characterization of language cortex should build on basic neuroscience research, making use of parametric designs that allow functional mapping.
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At what time is the cocktail party? A late locus of selective attention to natural speech.

TL;DR: Attentional effects on exogenous stimulus processing in the 200–220 ms range in the left hemisphere are shown and discussed within the context of research on auditory scene analysis and in terms of a flexible locus of attention that can be deployed at a particular processing stage depending on the task.
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Early Occipital Sensitivity to Syntactic Category Is Based on Form Typicality

TL;DR: It is proposed that predictions about upcoming syntactic categories are translated into form-based estimates, which are made available to sensory cortices and may be a key component to elucidating the mechanisms that allow the extreme rapidity and efficiency of language comprehension.
Journal ArticleDOI

Sensitivity to syntax in visual cortex

TL;DR: The results show that during reading, syntactically relevant cues in the input can affect activity in occipital regions at around 125 ms, a finding that may shed new light on the remarkable rapidity of language processing.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Magnetoencephalography—theory, instrumentation, and applications to noninvasive studies of the working human brain

TL;DR: The mathematical theory of the method is explained in detail, followed by a thorough description of MEG instrumentation, data analysis, and practical construction of multi-SQUID devices.
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Reading senseless sentences: brain potentials reflect semantic incongruity

TL;DR: In a sentence reading task, words that occurred out of context were associated with specific types of event-related brain potentials that elicited a late negative wave (N400).
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Electrophysiology reveals semantic memory use in language comprehension

TL;DR: Findings using an electrophysiological brain component, the N400, that reveal the nature and timing of semantic memory use during language comprehension support a view of memory in which world knowledge is distributed across multiple, plastic-yet-structured, largely modality-specific processing areas, and in which meaning is an emergent, temporally extended process.
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Language-specific phoneme representations revealed by electric and magnetic brain responses

TL;DR: It is found that the brain's automatic change-detection response, reflected electrically as the mismatch negativity (MMN) was enhanced when the infrequent, deviant stimulus was a prototype relative to when it was a non-prototype (the Estonian /õ/).
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards a functional neuroanatomy of speech perception

TL;DR: It is argued that cortical fields in the posterior-superior temporal lobe, bilaterally, constitute the primary substrate for constructing sound- based representations of speech, and that these sound-based representations interface with different supramodal systems in a task-dependent manner.
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