4.7 Article

Attention reinforces human corticofugal system to aid speech perception in noise

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 235, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2021.118014

Keywords

EEG; Functional connectivity; FFR; Corticofugal tuning; Hierarchical speech processing

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [NIH/NIDCD R01DC016267]
  2. UofM Institute for Intelligent Systems Dissertation grant

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The study shows that active listening enhances neural coding for speech processing, while passive listening hinders the signal transmission between the bottom-up (brainstem) and top-down (corticofugal) pathways within the auditory system. This suggests that attention not only affects speech processing at the cortical level, but also influences lower brainstem levels.
Perceiving speech-in-noise (SIN) demands precise neural coding between brainstem and cortical levels of the hearing system. Attentional processes can then select and prioritize task-relevant cues over competing back-ground noise for successful speech perception. In animal models, brainstem-cortical interplay is achieved via descending corticofugal projections from cortex that shape midbrain responses to behaviorally-relevant sounds. Attentional engagement of corticofugal feedback may assist SIN understanding but has never been confirmed and remains highly controversial in humans. To resolve these issues, we recorded source-level, anatomically con-strained brainstem frequency-following responses (FFRs) and cortical event-related potentials (ERPs) to speech via high-density EEG while listeners performed rapid SIN identification tasks. We varied attention with active vs. passive listening scenarios whereas task difficulty was manipulated with additive noise interference. Active listening (but not arousal-control tasks) exaggerated both ERPs and FFRs, confirming attentional gain extends to lower subcortical levels of speech processing. We used functional connectivity to measure the directed strength of coupling between levels and characterize bottom-up vs. top-down (corticofugal) signaling within the auditory brainstem-cortical pathway. While attention strengthened connectivity bidirectionally, corticofugal transmission disengaged under passive (but not active) SIN listening. Our findings (i) show attention enhances the brain's transcription of speech even prior to cortex and (ii) establish a direct role of the human corticofugal feedback system as an aid to cocktail party speech perception.

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