Murray Micah M, Camen Christian, Gonzalez Andino Sara L, Bovet Pierre, Clarke Stephanie
Neuropsychology Division, Hôpital Nestlé, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois, 1011 Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Neurosci. 2006 Jan 25;26(4):1293-302. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4511-05.2006.
Electrical neuroimaging in humans identified the speed and spatiotemporal brain mechanism whereby sounds of living and man-made objects are discriminated. Subjects performed an "oddball" target detection task, selectively responding to sounds of either living or man-made objects on alternating blocks, which were controlled for in their spectrogram and harmonics-to-noise ratios between categories. Analyses were conducted on 64-channel auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) from nontarget trials. Comparing responses to sounds of living versus man-made objects, these analyses tested for modulations in local AEP waveforms, global response strength, and the topography of the electric field at the scalp. In addition, the local autoregressive average distributed linear inverse solution was applied to periods of observed modulations. Just 70 ms after stimulus onset, a common network of brain regions within the auditory "what" processing stream responded more strongly to sounds of man-made versus living objects, with differential activity within the right temporal and left inferior frontal cortices. Over the 155-257 ms period, the duration of activity of a brain network, including bilateral temporal and premotor cortices, differed between categories of sounds. Responses to sounds of living objects peaked approximately 12 ms later and the activity of the brain network active over this period was prolonged relative to that in response to sounds of man-made objects. The earliest task-related effects were observed at approximately 100 ms poststimulus onset, placing an upper limit on the speed of cortical auditory object discrimination. These results provide critical temporal constraints on human auditory object recognition and semantic discrimination processes.
人类的电神经成像确定了区分生物和人造物体声音的速度以及大脑的时空机制。受试者执行了一项“异常球”目标检测任务,在交替的组块中对生物或人造物体的声音进行选择性反应,这些组块在频谱图以及类别之间的谐波噪声比方面受到控制。对来自非目标试验的64通道听觉诱发电位(AEP)进行了分析。通过比较对生物声音与人造物体声音的反应,这些分析测试了局部AEP波形、整体反应强度以及头皮电场地形图的调制情况。此外,将局部自回归平均分布式线性逆解应用于观察到的调制期。在刺激开始后仅70毫秒,听觉“什么”处理流中的一个常见脑区网络对人造物体声音的反应比对生物声音的反应更强烈,右侧颞叶和左侧额下回皮质内存在差异活动。在155 - 257毫秒期间,一个包括双侧颞叶和运动前皮质的脑网络的活动持续时间在不同类别的声音之间有所不同。对生物物体声音的反应峰值大约晚12毫秒出现,并且在此期间活跃的脑网络的活动相对于对人造物体声音的反应延长。最早的任务相关效应在刺激开始后约100毫秒被观察到,这为皮质听觉物体辨别速度设定了上限。这些结果为人类听觉物体识别和语义辨别过程提供了关键的时间限制。