4.7 Article

Cortical Representations of Speech in a Multitalker Auditory Scene

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 38, Pages 9189-9196

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0938-17.2017

Keywords

attention; auditory cortex; cocktail party problem; magnetoencephalography; stimulus reconstruction; temporal response function

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01 DC014085]

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The ability to parse a complex auditory scene into perceptual objects is facilitated by a hierarchical auditory system. Successive stages in the hierarchy transform an auditory scene of multiple overlapping sources, from peripheral tonotopically based representations in the auditory nerve, into perceptually distinct auditory-object-based representations in the auditory cortex. Here, using magnetoencephalography recordings from men and women, we investigate how a complex acoustic scene consisting of multiple speech sources is represented in distinct hierarchical stages of the auditory cortex. Using systems-theoretic methods of stimulus reconstruction, we show that the primary-like areas in the auditory cortex contain dominantly spectrotemporal-based representations of the entire auditory scene. Here, both attended and ignored speech streams are represented with almost equal fidelity, and a global representation of the full auditory scene with all its streams is a better candidate neural representation than that of individual streams being represented separately. We also show that higher-order auditory cortical areas, by contrast, represent the attended stream separately and with significantly higher fidelity than unattended streams. Furthermore, the unattended background streams are more faithfully represented as a single unsegregated background object rather than as separated objects. Together, these findings demonstrate the progression of the representations and processing of a complex acoustic scene up through the hierarchy of the human auditory cortex.

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