4.7 Article

A distributed dynamic brain network mediates linguistic tone representation and categorization

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2020.117410

Keywords

Categorization decision; Lexical tones; Neural decoding; Neural representation; Perceptual constancy; Speech categorization

Funding

  1. National Institute on Deafness and other Communication Disorders of the National Institutes of Health [R01DC013315 834]
  2. Research Grants Council of Hong Kong [14619518, 34000118]
  3. Chinese University of Hong Kong [4051137]

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This study assessed the neural representation and categorization of lexical tones by native Mandarin speakers using fMRI and an evidence accumulation model. The findings suggest that acoustic-variability-tolerant representations of tone category are observed in the left superior temporal gyrus, with activation patterns in frontal and parietal regions containing category-relevant information sensitive to various forms of variability.
Successful categorization requires listeners to represent the incoming sensory information, resolve the blooming, buzzing confusion inherent to noisy sensory signals, and leverage the accumulated evidence towards making a decision. Despite decades of intense debate, the neural systems underlying speech categorization remain unresolved. Here we assessed the neural representation and categorization of lexical tones by native Mandarin speakers (N = 31) across a range of acoustic and contextual variabilities (talkers, perceptual saliences, and stimulus-contexts) using functional magnetic imaging (fMRI) and an evidence accumulation model of decision-making. Univariate activation and multivariate pattern analyses reveal that the acoustic-variability-tolerant representations of tone category are observed within the middle portion of the left superior temporal gyrus (STG). Activation patterns in the frontal and parietal regions also contained category-relevant information that was differentially sensitive to various forms of variability. The robustness of neural representations of tone category in a distributed fronto-temporoparietal network is associated with trial-by-trial decision-making parameters. These findings support a hybrid model involving a representational core within the STG that operates dynamically within an extensive frontoparietal network to support the representation and categorization of linguistic pitch patterns.

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