AI Article Synopsis

  • Tonal languages, spoken by about one-third of the global population, use pitch control to distinguish words with different meanings through specific patterns called lexical tones.
  • A study utilizing high-density direct cortical recordings from native Mandarin speakers found that the laryngeal motor cortex encodes the movement information needed for producing these pitch dynamics rather than categorizing tones.
  • Two distinct activity patterns in the laryngeal motor cortex were identified for pitch rising and lowering, with direct brain stimulation confirming their influence on tone production.

Article Abstract

In tonal languages, which are spoken by nearly one-third of the world's population, speakers precisely control the tension of vocal folds in the larynx to modulate pitch in order to distinguish words with completely different meanings. The specific pitch trajectories for a given tonal language are called lexical tones. Here, we used high-density direct cortical recordings to determine the neural basis of lexical tone production in native Mandarin-speaking participants. We found that instead of a tone category-selective coding, local populations in the bilateral laryngeal motor cortex (LMC) encode articulatory kinematic information to generate the pitch dynamics of lexical tones. Using a computational model of tone production, we discovered two distinct patterns of population activity in LMC commanding pitch rising and lowering. Finally, we showed that direct electrocortical stimulation of different local populations in LMC evoked pitch rising and lowering during tone production, respectively. Together, these results reveal the neural basis of vocal pitch control of lexical tones in tonal languages.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10616086PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-42175-9DOI Listing

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