Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21025, USA.
J Neurosci. 2012 Aug 1;32(31):10737-48. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3448-11.2012.
Speaking is a sensory-motor process that involves constant self-monitoring to ensure accurate vocal production. Self-monitoring of vocal feedback allows rapid adjustment to correct perceived differences between intended and produced vocalizations. One important behavior in vocal feedback control is a compensatory increase in vocal intensity in response to noise masking during vocal production, commonly referred to as the Lombard effect. This behavior requires mechanisms for continuously monitoring auditory feedback during speaking. However, the underlying neural mechanisms are poorly understood. Here we show that when marmoset monkeys vocalize in the presence of masking noise that disrupts vocal feedback, the compensatory increase in vocal intensity is accompanied by a shift in auditory cortex activity toward neural response patterns seen during vocalizations under normal feedback condition. Furthermore, we show that neural activity in auditory cortex during a vocalization phrase predicts vocal intensity compensation in subsequent phrases. These observations demonstrate that the auditory cortex participates in self-monitoring during the Lombard effect, and may play a role in the compensation of noise masking during feedback-mediated vocal control.
说话是一个涉及不断自我监控以确保准确发声的感觉运动过程。对声音反馈的自我监控允许快速调整,以纠正感知到的意图和产生的发声之间的差异。声音反馈控制中的一个重要行为是在发声过程中对噪声掩蔽做出补偿性的声音强度增加,通常称为 Lombard 效应。这种行为需要在说话时持续监测听觉反馈的机制。然而,其潜在的神经机制尚不清楚。在这里,我们表明,当狨猴在掩蔽噪声存在的情况下发声,而这种噪声会破坏声音反馈时,声音强度的补偿性增加伴随着听觉皮层活动向在正常反馈条件下发声时观察到的神经反应模式的转变。此外,我们还表明,在发声短语期间听觉皮层中的神经活动可以预测后续短语中声音强度的补偿。这些观察结果表明,听觉皮层参与了 Lombard 效应期间的自我监控,并且可能在反馈介导的声音控制期间对噪声掩蔽的补偿中发挥作用。