4.7 Article

Multiple brain signatures of integration in the comprehension of degraded speech

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 55, 期 2, 页码 713-723

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.12.020

关键词

EEG; Auditory; Speech comprehension; Semantic processing; N100; N400; Gamma

资金

  1. The Max Planck Society
  2. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

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When listening to speech under adverse conditions, expectancies resulting from semantic context can have a strong impact on comprehension. Here we ask how minimal variations in semantic context (doze probability) affect the unfolding comprehension of acoustically degraded speech. Three main results are observed in the brain electric response. First, auditory evoked responses to a degraded sentence's onset (N100) correlate with participants' comprehension scores, but are generally more vigorous for more degraded sentences. Second, a pronounced N400 in response to low-doze sentence-final words, reflecting the integration effort of words into context, increases linearly with improving speech intelligibility. Conversely, transient enhancement in Gamma band power (gamma, similar to 40-70 Hz) during high-doze sentence-final words (similar to 600 ms) reflects top-down-facilitated integration. This gamma-band effect also varies parametrically with signal quality. Third, a negative correlation of N100 amplitude at sentence onset and the later gamma-band response is found in moderately degraded speech. This reflects two partly distinct neural strategies when dealing with moderately degraded speech; a more bottom-up, resource-allocating, and effortful versus a more top-down, associative and facilitatory strategy. Results also emphasize the non-red undant contributions of phase-locked (evoked) and non-phase-locked (induced) oscillatory brain dynamics in auditory EEG. (C) 2010 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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