Department of General Neurology, Center for Neurology, Hertie Institute for Clinical Brain Research, University of Tübingen Tübingen, Germany.
Front Hum Neurosci. 2013 Oct 23;7:701. doi: 10.3389/fnhum.2013.00701. eCollection 2013.
Individuals suffering from vision loss of a peripheral origin may learn to understand spoken language at a rate of up to about 22 syllables (syl) per seconds (s)-exceeding by far the maximum performance level of untrained listeners (ca. 8 syl/s). Previous findings indicate the central-visual system to contribute to the processing of accelerated speech in blind subjects. As an extension, the present training study addresses the issue whether acquisition of ultra-fast (18 syl/s) speech perception skills induces de novo central-visual hemodynamic activation in late-blind participants. Furthermore, we asked to what extent subjects with normal or residual vision can improve understanding of accelerated verbal utterances by means of specific training measures. To these ends, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) was performed while subjects were listening to forward and reversed sentence utterances of moderately fast and ultra-fast syllable rates (8 or 18 syl/s) prior to and after a training period of ca. 6 months. Four of six participants showed-independently from residual visual functions-considerable enhancement of ultra-fast speech perception (about 70% points correctly repeated words) whereas behavioral performance did not change in the two remaining participants. Only subjects with very low visual acuity displayed training-induced hemodynamic activation of the central-visual system. By contrast, participants with moderately impaired or even normal visual acuity showed, instead, increased right-hemispheric frontal or bilateral anterior temporal lobe responses after training. All subjects with significant training effects displayed a concomitant increase of hemodynamic activation of left-hemispheric SMA. In spite of similar behavioral performance, trained "experts" appear to use distinct strategies of ultra-fast speech processing depending on whether the occipital cortex is still deployed for visual processing.
个体若患有周边起源的视力丧失,其可能以每秒高达 22 音节(syl)的速度理解口语-远远超过未经训练的听众的最大表现水平(约 8 syl/s)。先前的研究结果表明,中枢视觉系统有助于盲人处理加速的言语。作为扩展,本培训研究探讨了以下问题:超快速(18 syl/s)语音感知技能的习得是否会在晚期失明参与者中引起新的中枢视觉血流动力学激活。此外,我们还询问了视力正常或有残余视力的受试者能否通过特定的训练措施来提高对加速言语的理解。为此,在大约 6 个月的训练期前后,当受试者听中度快速和超快速音节率(8 或 18 syl/s)的正向和反向句子时,进行了功能磁共振成像(fMRI)。在四位参与者中,有四位参与者表现出显著的超快速语音感知能力增强(大约 70%的单词正确重复),而其余两位参与者的行为表现没有变化。只有视力非常低的参与者表现出训练引起的中枢视觉系统的血流动力学激活。相比之下,视力中度受损甚至正常的参与者在训练后显示出右半球额叶或双侧前颞叶反应增加。所有具有显著训练效果的参与者都显示出左半球 SMA 的血流动力学激活增加。尽管行为表现相似,但经过训练的“专家”似乎根据枕叶皮层是否仍用于视觉处理,采用不同的超快速言语处理策略。