Ahveninen Jyrki, Jääskeläinen Iiro P, Raij Tommi, Bonmassar Giorgio, Devore Sasha, Hämäläinen Matti, Levänen Sari, Lin Fa-Hsuan, Sams Mikko, Shinn-Cunningham Barbara G, Witzel Thomas, Belliveau John W
Harvard Medical School-Athinoula A. Martinos Center for Biomedical Imaging, Department of Radiology, Massachusetts General Hospital, CNY 149 13th Street, Charlestown, MA 02129, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2006 Sep 26;103(39):14608-13. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0510480103. Epub 2006 Sep 18.
Human neuroimaging studies suggest that localization and identification of relevant auditory objects are accomplished via parallel parietal-to-lateral-prefrontal "where" and anterior-temporal-to-inferior-frontal "what" pathways, respectively. Using combined hemodynamic (functional MRI) and electromagnetic (magnetoencephalography) measurements, we investigated whether such dual pathways exist already in the human nonprimary auditory cortex, as suggested by animal models, and whether selective attention facilitates sound localization and identification by modulating these pathways in a feature-specific fashion. We found a double dissociation in response adaptation to sound pairs with phonetic vs. spatial sound changes, demonstrating that the human nonprimary auditory cortex indeed processes speech-sound identity and location in parallel anterior "what" (in anterolateral Heschl's gyrus, anterior superior temporal gyrus, and posterior planum polare) and posterior "where" (in planum temporale and posterior superior temporal gyrus) pathways as early as approximately 70-150 ms from stimulus onset. Our data further show that the "where" pathway is activated approximately 30 ms earlier than the "what" pathway, possibly enabling the brain to use top-down spatial information in auditory object perception. Notably, selectively attending to phonetic content modulated response adaptation in the "what" pathway, whereas attending to sound location produced analogous effects in the "where" pathway. This finding suggests that selective-attention effects are feature-specific in the human nonprimary auditory cortex and that they arise from enhanced tuning of receptive fields of task-relevant neuronal populations.
人类神经影像学研究表明,相关听觉对象的定位和识别分别通过顶叶到外侧前额叶的“哪里”通路和颞前叶到额下回的“什么”通路并行完成。我们使用血流动力学(功能磁共振成像)和电磁学(脑磁图)联合测量方法,研究了动物模型所提示的这种双重通路是否已存在于人类非初级听觉皮层中,以及选择性注意是否通过以特征特异性方式调节这些通路来促进声音定位和识别。我们发现,对语音与空间声音变化的声音对进行反应适应时存在双重分离,这表明人类非初级听觉皮层确实早在刺激开始后约70 - 150毫秒就通过并行的前侧“什么”通路(在外侧赫氏回、颞上回前部和颞极后部平面)和后侧“哪里”通路(在颞平面和颞上回后部)处理语音声音的身份和位置。我们的数据进一步表明,“哪里”通路比“什么”通路早约30毫秒被激活,这可能使大脑能够在听觉对象感知中使用自上而下的空间信息。值得注意的是,选择性地关注语音内容会调节“什么”通路中的反应适应,而关注声音位置则会在“哪里”通路中产生类似的效果。这一发现表明,在人类非初级听觉皮层中,选择性注意效应是特征特异性的,并且它们源于与任务相关的神经元群体感受野的增强调谐。