4.7 Article

MEG Intersubject Phase Locking of Stimulus-Driven Activity during Naturalistic Speech Listening Correlates with Musical Training

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 12, Pages 2713-2722

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0932-20.2020

Keywords

intersubject analysis; magnetoencephalography; musical training; phase-locking value; speech processing

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [PU590/1]
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [FDN1432179]
  3. Natural Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [436355-13]
  4. National Institutes of Health [2R01-EB-009048-05]
  5. Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives Canada Excellence Research Fund
  6. Brain Canada Foundation [PSG15-3755]

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This study explores the effects of musical training on the synchronization of brain regions involved in speech processing, finding that musicians exhibit increased interregional connectivity and synchronization when listening to speech. The degree of musical training positively correlates with the magnitude of neural synchronization, suggesting a link between musical expertise and enhanced processing of speech-related information.
Musical training is associated with increased structural and functional connectivity between auditory sensory areas and higher order brain networks involved in speech and motor processing. Whether such changed connectivity patterns facilitate the cortical propagation of speech information in musicians remains poorly understood. We here used magnetoencephalography (MEG) source imaging and a novel seed-based intersubject phase-locking approach to investigate the effects of musical training on the interregional synchronization of stimulus-driven neural responses during listening to naturalistic continuous speech presented in silence. MEG data were obtained from 20 young human subjects (both sexes) with different degrees of musical training. Our data show robust bilateral patterns of stimulus-driven interregional phase synchronization between auditory cortex and frontotemporal brain regions previously associated with speech processing. Stimulus-driven phase locking was maximal in the delta band, but was also observed in the theta and alpha bands. The individual duration of musical training was positively associated with the magnitude of stimulus-driven alpha-band phase locking between auditory cortex and parts of the dorsal and ventral auditory processing streams. These findings provide evidence for a positive relationship between musical training and the propagation of speech-related information between auditory sensory areas and higher-order processing networks, even when speech is presented in silence. We suggest that the increased synchronization of higher-order cortical regions to auditory cortex may contribute to the previously described musician advantage in processing speech in background noise.

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