4.6 Article

Simultaneous auditory agnosia: Systematic description of a new type of auditory segregation deficit following a right hemisphere lesion

Journal

CORTEX
Volume 135, Issue -, Pages 92-107

Publisher

ELSEVIER MASSON, CORP OFF
DOI: 10.1016/j.cortex.2020.10.023

Keywords

Audition; Segregation; Speech perception; Music; Misophonia

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Society [WT091681MA, DC000242-31]
  2. Alzheimer's Research UK
  3. NIHR UCL/UCLH Biomedical Research Centre

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The study demonstrated an acquired deficit in the segregation of complex acoustic patterns due to cortical damage, providing a causal explanation for the symptomatic deficits in the segregation of speech and music. The functional imaging studies implicate non-primary auditory cortex and highlight a (partial) lateralisation of the necessary anatomical substrate for segregation.
We investigated auditory processing in a young patient who experienced a single embolus causing an infarct in the right middle cerebral artery territory. This led to damage to auditory cortex including planum temporale that spared medial Heschl's gyrus, and included damage to the posterior insula and inferior parietal lobule. She reported chronic difficulties with segregating speech from noise and segregating elements of music. Clinical tests showed no evidence for abnormal cochlear function. Follow-up tests confirmed difficulties with auditory segregation in her left ear that spanned multiple domains, including words-in-noise and music streaming. Testing with a stochastic figure-ground taskda way of estimating generic acoustic foreground and background segregationddemonstrated that this was also abnormal. This is the first demonstration of an acquired deficit in the segregation of complex acoustic patterns due to cortical damage, which we argue is a causal explanation for the symptomatic deficits in the segregation of speech and music. These symptoms are analogous to the visual symptom of simultaneous agnosia. Consistent with functional imaging studies on normal listeners, the work implicates non-primary auditory cortex. Further, the work demonstrates a (partial) lateralisation of the necessary anatomical substrate for segregation that has not been previously highlighted. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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