AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how auditory experience influences the brain's ability to perceive and process speech, focusing on neural entrainment and neuroplasticity in musicians versus nonmusicians.
  • Participants underwent training to identify double-vowel sounds while their brain activity was recorded, revealing that neural synchronization to speech predicted their performance in identifying sounds.
  • Results showed that musicians exhibited stronger auditory-motor connectivity in the right hemisphere compared to nonmusicians, and that stronger neural entrainment was linked to incorrect responses, suggesting an important role of brain activity patterns in speech processing.

Article Abstract

Background: Plasticity from auditory experience shapes the brain's encoding and perception of sound. Though prior research demonstrates that neural entrainment (i.e., brain-to-acoustic synchronization) aids speech perception, how long- and short-term plasticity influence entrainment to concurrent speech has not been investigated. Here, we explored neural entrainment mechanisms and the interplay between short- and long-term neuroplasticity for rapid auditory perceptual learning of concurrent speech sounds in young, normal-hearing musicians and nonmusicians.

Method: Participants learned to identify double-vowel mixtures during ∼45 min training sessions with concurrent high-density EEG recordings. We examined the degree to which brain responses entrained to the speech-stimulus train (∼9 Hz) to investigate whether entrainment to speech prior to behavioral decision predicted task performance. Source and directed functional connectivity analyses of the EEG probed whether behavior was driven by group differences auditory-motor coupling.

Results: Both musicians and nonmusicians showed rapid perceptual learning in accuracy with training. Interestingly, listeners' neural entrainment strength prior to target speech mixtures predicted behavioral identification performance; stronger neural synchronization was observed preceding incorrect compared to correct trial responses. We also found stark hemispheric biases in auditory-motor coupling during speech entrainment, with greater auditory-motor connectivity in the right compared to left hemisphere for musicians (R>L) but not in nonmusicians (R=L).

Conclusions: Our findings confirm stronger neuroacoustic synchronization and auditory-motor coupling during speech processing in musicians. Stronger neural entrainment to rapid stimulus trains preceding incorrect behavioral responses supports the notion that alpha-band (∼10 Hz) arousal/suppression in brain activity is an important modulator of trial-by-trial success in perceptual processing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11275804PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.07.18.604167DOI Listing

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