Department of Integrative Neurophysiology, Center for Neurogenomics and Cognitive Research, VU University Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Amsterdam Neuroscience, Amsterdam, Netherlands, and.
J Neurosci. 2018 Jan 17;38(3):710-722. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1515-17.2017. Epub 2017 Dec 7.
Speech comprehension is preserved up to a threefold acceleration, but deteriorates rapidly at higher speeds. Current models posit that perceptual resilience to accelerated speech is limited by the brain's ability to parse speech into syllabic units using δ/θ oscillations. Here, we investigated whether the involvement of neuronal oscillations in processing accelerated speech also relates to their scale-free amplitude modulation as indexed by the strength of long-range temporal correlations (LRTC). We recorded MEG while 24 human subjects (12 females) listened to radio news uttered at different comprehensible rates, at a mostly unintelligible rate and at this same speed interleaved with silence gaps. δ, θ, and low-γ oscillations followed the nonlinear variation of comprehension, with LRTC rising only at the highest speed. In contrast, increasing the rate was associated with a monotonic increase in LRTC in high-γ activity. When intelligibility was restored with the insertion of silence gaps, LRTC in the δ, θ, and low-γ oscillations resumed the low levels observed for intelligible speech. Remarkably, the lower the individual subject scaling exponents of δ/θ oscillations, the greater the comprehension of the fastest speech rate. Moreover, the strength of LRTC of the speech envelope decreased at the maximal rate, suggesting an inverse relationship with the LRTC of brain dynamics when comprehension halts. Our findings show that scale-free amplitude modulation of cortical oscillations and speech signals are tightly coupled to speech uptake capacity. One may read this statement in 20-30 s, but reading it in less than five leaves us clueless. Our minds limit how much information we grasp in an instant. Understanding the neural constraints on our capacity for sensory uptake is a fundamental question in neuroscience. Here, MEG was used to investigate neuronal activity while subjects listened to radio news played faster and faster until becoming unintelligible. We found that speech comprehension is related to the scale-free dynamics of δ and θ bands, whereas this property in high-γ fluctuations mirrors speech rate. We propose that successful speech processing imposes constraints on the self-organization of synchronous cell assemblies and their scale-free dynamics adjusts to the temporal properties of spoken language.
言语理解能力在加速三倍以内时得以保留,但在更高的速度下会迅速恶化。目前的模型假设,大脑将言语解析为音节单位的能力限制了对加速言语的感知弹性,这种能力是通过 δ/θ 振荡实现的。在这里,我们研究了处理加速言语的神经元振荡是否也与它们的无标度幅度调制有关,这种调制由长程时间相关性(LRTC)的强度来表示。我们记录了 24 名人类受试者(12 名女性)在不同可理解率下、在大多不可理解的率下以及以同样的速度与静音间隔交替收听广播新闻时的 MEG。δ、θ 和低 γ 振荡与理解的非线性变化一致,只有在最高速度下才会出现 LRTC 上升。相比之下,随着速度的增加,高 γ 活动中的 LRTC 呈单调增加。当用静音间隔恢复可理解性时,δ、θ 和低 γ 振荡中的 LRTC 恢复到可理解言语的低水平。值得注意的是,个体受试者 δ/θ 振荡的标度指数越低,对最快语速的理解就越好。此外,在最大速度下,言语包络的 LRTC 强度下降,表明当理解停止时,大脑动力学的 LRTC 呈反比关系。我们的发现表明,皮质振荡和言语信号的无标度幅度调制与言语摄取能力紧密耦合。人们可以在 20-30 秒内阅读这段文字,但如果在 5 秒内阅读,我们就会感到困惑。我们的大脑限制了我们在瞬间获取的信息量。理解我们对感觉摄取能力的神经限制是神经科学中的一个基本问题。在这里,我们使用 MEG 来研究当受试者听到越来越快的广播新闻直到无法理解时的神经元活动。我们发现,言语理解与 δ 和 θ 波段的无标度动力学有关,而高 γ 波动的这种特性则反映了言语的速度。我们提出,成功的言语处理对同步细胞集合的自组织施加了限制,并且它们的无标度动力学调整到了口语语言的时间特性。