Department of Psychology, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213;
Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2019 Mar 5;116(10):4671-4680. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1811992116. Epub 2019 Feb 19.
Humans are born as "universal listeners" without a bias toward any particular language. However, over the first year of life, infants' perception is shaped by learning native speech categories. Acoustically different sounds-such as the same word produced by different speakers-come to be treated as functionally equivalent. In natural environments, these categories often emerge incidentally without overt categorization or explicit feedback. However, the neural substrates of category learning have been investigated almost exclusively using overt categorization tasks with explicit feedback about categorization decisions. Here, we examined whether the striatum, previously implicated in category learning, contributes to incidental acquisition of sound categories. In the fMRI scanner, participants played a videogame in which sound category exemplars aligned with game actions and events, allowing sound categories to incidentally support successful game play. An experimental group heard nonspeech sound exemplars drawn from coherent category spaces, whereas a control group heard acoustically similar sounds drawn from a less structured space. Although the groups exhibited similar in-game performance, generalization of sound category learning and activation of the posterior striatum were significantly greater in the experimental than control group. Moreover, the experimental group showed brain-behavior relationships related to the generalization of all categories, while in the control group these relationships were restricted to the categories with structured sound distributions. Together, these results demonstrate that the striatum, through its interactions with the left superior temporal sulcus, contributes to incidental acquisition of sound category representations emerging from naturalistic learning environments.
人类天生就是“通用听众”,对任何特定语言都没有偏见。然而,在生命的第一年,婴儿的感知是通过学习母语的语音类别形成的。声学上不同的声音——例如由不同说话者发出的相同单词——会被视为功能等效。在自然环境中,这些类别通常是偶然出现的,没有明显的分类或明确的反馈。然而,类别学习的神经基质几乎完全是通过具有明确分类决策反馈的显性分类任务来研究的。在这里,我们研究了纹状体是否有助于偶然获得声音类别,纹状体先前被认为与类别学习有关。在 fMRI 扫描仪中,参与者玩一个视频游戏,其中声音类别范例与游戏动作和事件对齐,允许声音类别偶然支持成功的游戏玩法。实验组听到来自连贯类别空间的非语音声音范例,而对照组听到来自结构较少空间的声学相似声音。尽管两组在游戏中表现相似,但实验组在声音类别学习的泛化和后纹状体的激活方面明显优于对照组。此外,实验组表现出与所有类别泛化相关的大脑-行为关系,而对照组的这些关系仅限于具有结构化声音分布的类别。总之,这些结果表明,纹状体通过与左颞上回的相互作用,有助于从自然学习环境中出现的声音类别表示的偶然习得。