AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent models of speech perception suggest that a left auditory dorsal processing stream connects how we hear speech in the auditory cortex to how we produce it in our motor system.
  • This study used transcranial magnetic stimulation to explore the role of specific brain areas (like the left premotor cortex and supramarginal gyrus) in speech recognition during an auditory task involving identifying ambiguous syllables.
  • Results showed that participants who heard /ba/ syllables first were more likely to identify subsequent ambiguous sounds as /da/, indicating that the auditory dorsal pathway plays a significant role in how we adapt to and recognize speech sounds.

Article Abstract

In addition to sensory processing, recent neurobiological models of speech perception postulate the existence of a left auditory dorsal processing stream, linking auditory speech representations in the auditory cortex with articulatory representations in the motor system, through sensorimotor interaction interfaced in the supramarginal gyrus and/or the posterior part of the superior temporal gyrus. The present state-dependent transcranial magnetic stimulation study is aimed at determining whether speech recognition is indeed mediated by the auditory dorsal pathway, by examining the causal contribution of the left ventral premotor cortex, supramarginal gyrus and posterior part of the superior temporal gyrus during an auditory syllable identification/categorization task. To this aim, participants listened to a sequence of /ba/ syllables before undergoing a two forced-choice auditory syllable decision task on ambiguous syllables (ranging in the categorical boundary between /ba/ and /da/). Consistent with previous studies on selective adaptation to speech, following adaptation to /ba/, participants responses were biased towards /da/. In contrast, in a control condition without prior auditory adaptation no such bias was observed. Crucially, compared to the results observed without stimulation, single-pulse transcranial magnetic stimulation delivered at the onset of each target stimulus interacted with the initial state of each of the stimulated brain area by enhancing the adaptation effect. These results demonstrate that the auditory dorsal pathway contribute to auditory speech adaptation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.brainres.2013.03.024DOI Listing

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