Neural Correlates of Speech Segregation Based on Formant Frequencies of Adjacent Vowels

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS(2017)

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摘要
The neural substrates by which speech sounds are perceptually segregated into distinct streams are poorly understood. Here, we recorded high-density scalp event-related potentials (ERPs) while participants were presented with a cyclic pattern of three vowel sounds (/ee/-/ae/-/ee/). Each trial consisted of an adaptation sequence, which could have either a small, intermediate, or large difference in first formant (Δ f 1 ) as well as a test sequence, in which Δ f 1 was always intermediate. For the adaptation sequence, participants tended to hear two streams (“streaming”) when Δ f 1 was intermediate or large compared to when it was small. For the test sequence, in which Δ f 1 was always intermediate, the pattern was usually reversed, with participants hearing a single stream with increasing Δ f 1 in the adaptation sequences. During the adaptation sequence, Δ f 1 -related brain activity was found between 100–250 ms after the /ae/ vowel over fronto-central and left temporal areas, consistent with generation in auditory cortex. For the test sequence, prior stimulus modulated ERP amplitude between 20–150 ms over left fronto-central scalp region. Our results demonstrate that the proximity of formants between adjacent vowels is an important factor in the perceptual organization of speech, and reveal a widely distributed neural network supporting perceptual grouping of speech sounds.
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Cognitive neuroscience,Neuroscience,Science,Humanities and Social Sciences,multidisciplinary
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