4.7 Article

Speech listening entails neural encoding of invisible articulatory features

期刊

NEUROIMAGE
卷 264, 期 -, 页码 -

出版社

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119724

关键词

Speech entrainment; Speech articulation; EEG; Partial information decomposition; Mutual Information; Audio-motor maps; Articulatory Synergies

资金

  1. BIAL Foundation [246/20]
  2. Ministero della Salute [GR-2016-02361008, GR-2018-12366027]
  3. Ministero della Ricerca [20208RB4N9]
  4. European Union H2020 - EnTimeMent [FETPROACT-824160]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Speech processing involves the interplay between bottom-up and top-down computations. The brain is able to reconstruct articulatory patterns associated with speech production during speech listening, and tongue movements provide unique and synergistic information.
Speech processing entails a complex interplay between bottom-up and top-down computations. The former is re-flected in the neural entrainment to the quasi-rhythmic properties of speech acoustics while the latter is supposed to guide the selection of the most relevant input subspace. Top-down signals are believed to originate mainly from motor regions, yet similar activities have been shown to tune attentional cycles also for simpler, non-speech stim-uli. Here we examined whether, during speech listening, the brain reconstructs articulatory patterns associated to speech production. We measured electroencephalographic (EEG) data while participants listened to sentences during the production of which articulatory kinematics of lips, jaws and tongue were also recorded (via Electro-Magnetic Articulography, EMA). We captured the patterns of articulatory coordination through Principal Compo-nent Analysis (PCA) and used Partial Information Decomposition (PID) to identify whether the speech envelope and each of the kinematic components provided unique, synergistic and/or redundant information regarding the EEG signals. Interestingly, tongue movements contain both unique as well as synergistic information with the envelope that are encoded in the listener's brain activity. This demonstrates that during speech listening the brain retrieves highly specific and unique motor information that is never accessible through vision, thus leveraging audio-motor maps that arise most likely from the acquisition of speech production during development.

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