4.5 Article

Time course of EEG complexity reflects attentional engagement during listening to speech in noise

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 58, Issue 9, Pages 4043-4069

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/ejn.16159

Keywords

auditory attention; complexity; EEG; microstates; speech in noise; speech perception

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This study explores how auditory distractions influence the process of information encoding during speech comprehension. The findings showed that when attention was directed towards speech, the complexity and unpredictability of microstate dynamics increased. Coping with background noise during speech comprehension demands sustained cognitive effort. Additionally, there were two stages of time course for microstate complexity and alpha-to-theta power ratio.
Auditory distractions are recognized to considerably challenge the quality of information encoding during speech comprehension. This study explores electroencephalography (EEG) microstate dynamics in ecologically valid, noisy settings, aiming to uncover how these auditory distractions influence the process of information encoding during speech comprehension. We examined three listening scenarios: (1) speech perception with background noise (LA), (2) focused attention on the background noise (BA), and (3) intentional disregard of the background noise (BUA). Our findings showed that microstate complexity and unpredictability increased when attention was directed towards speech compared with tasks without speech (LA > BA & BUA). Notably, the time elapsed between the recurrence of microstates increased significantly in LA compared with both BA and BUA. This suggests that coping with background noise during speech comprehension demands more sustained cognitive effort. Additionally, a two-stage time course for both microstate complexity and alpha-to-theta power ratio was observed. Specifically, in the early epochs, a lower level was observed, which gradually increased and eventually reached a steady level in the later epochs. The findings suggest that the initial stage is primarily driven by sensory processes and information gathering, while the second stage involves higher level cognitive engagement, including mnemonic binding and memory encoding.

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