Department of Neurosurgery, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA; Iowa Neuroscience Institute, The University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA.
Departments of Neurology and Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY, USA.
Hear Res. 2019 Jan;371:53-65. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2018.11.009. Epub 2018 Nov 22.
Understanding cortical processing of spectrally degraded speech in normal-hearing subjects may provide insights into how sound information is processed by cochlear implant (CI) users. This study investigated electrocorticographic (ECoG) responses to noise-vocoded speech and related these responses to behavioral performance in a phonemic identification task. Subjects were neurosurgical patients undergoing chronic invasive monitoring for medically refractory epilepsy. Stimuli were utterances /aba/ and /ada/, spectrally degraded using a noise vocoder (1-4 bands). ECoG responses were obtained from Heschl's gyrus (HG) and superior temporal gyrus (STG), and were examined within the high gamma frequency range (70-150 Hz). All subjects performed at chance accuracy with speech degraded to 1 and 2 spectral bands, and at or near ceiling for clear speech. Inter-subject variability was observed in the 3- and 4-band conditions. High gamma responses in posteromedial HG (auditory core cortex) were similar for all vocoded conditions and clear speech. A progressive preference for clear speech emerged in anterolateral segments of HG, regardless of behavioral performance. On the lateral STG, responses to all vocoded stimuli were larger in subjects with better task performance. In contrast, both behavioral and neural responses to clear speech were comparable across subjects regardless of their ability to identify degraded stimuli. Findings highlight differences in representation of spectrally degraded speech across cortical areas and their relationship to perception. The results are in agreement with prior non-invasive results. The data provide insight into the neural mechanisms associated with variability in perception of degraded speech and potentially into sources of such variability in CI users.
了解正常听力受试者对频谱退化语音的皮质处理过程,可能有助于深入了解人工耳蜗(CI)使用者如何处理声音信息。本研究通过语音识别任务,调查了皮质脑电图(ECoG)对噪声编码语音的反应,并将这些反应与行为表现相关联。研究对象是正在接受慢性侵袭性监测以治疗药物难治性癫痫的神经外科患者。刺激物是使用噪声声码器(1-4 个频带)对语音进行频谱退化后的/a/和/da/音。从 Heschl 回(HG)和颞上回(STG)获取 ECoG 反应,并在高伽马频带(70-150Hz)内进行检查。所有受试者在语音降为 1 个和 2 个频谱带时,以及在语音清晰时,表现为随机准确性。在 3 个和 4 个频带条件下观察到了受试者间的变异性。所有声码条件和清晰语音下,后内侧 HG(听觉核心皮层)的高伽马反应相似。在 HG 的前外侧段,无论行为表现如何,都出现了对清晰语音的偏好。在外侧 STG 上,无论任务表现如何,对所有声码化刺激的反应在表现较好的受试者中更大。相比之下,无论其识别退化刺激的能力如何,清晰语音的行为和神经反应在所有受试者中都相似。研究结果突出了不同皮质区域对频谱退化语音的不同表示方式及其与感知的关系。这些结果与之前的非侵入性结果一致。这些数据提供了对与感知退化语音的可变性相关的神经机制的深入了解,并可能为 CI 用户中的这种可变性的来源提供了线索。