Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2021 Jun 18;64(6S):2169-2181. doi: 10.1044/2020_JSLHR-20-00263. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
Purpose Speakers use auditory feedback to guide their speech output, although individuals differ in the magnitude of their compensatory response to perceived errors in feedback. Little is known about the factors that contribute to the compensatory response or how fixed or flexible they are within an individual. Here, we test whether manipulating the perceived reliability of auditory feedback modulates speakers' compensation to auditory perturbations, as predicted by optimal models of sensorimotor control. Method Forty participants produced monosyllabic words in two separate sessions, which differed in the auditory feedback given during an initial exposure phase. In the session exposure phase, feedback was normal. In the session exposure phase, small, random formant perturbations were applied, reducing reliability of auditory feedback. In each session, a subsequent test phase introduced larger unpredictable formant perturbations. We assessed whether the magnitude of within-trial compensation for these larger perturbations differed across the two sessions. Results Compensatory responses to downward (though not upward) formant perturbations were larger in the veridical session than the noisy session. However, in post hoc testing, we found the magnitude of this effect is highly dependent on the choice of analysis procedures. Compensation magnitude was not predicted by other production measures, such as formant variability, and was not reliably correlated across sessions. Conclusions Our results, though mixed, provide tentative support that the feedback control system monitors the reliability of sensory feedback. These results must be interpreted cautiously given the potentially limited stability of auditory feedback compensation measures across analysis choices and across sessions. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.14167136.
目的 说话者使用听觉反馈来指导他们的言语输出,尽管个体对反馈中感知到的错误的补偿反应幅度不同。对于导致补偿反应的因素以及它们在个体内部的固定程度或灵活性知之甚少。在这里,我们测试了通过感觉运动控制的最佳模型来预测,操纵听觉反馈的可感知可靠性是否会调节说话者对听觉干扰的补偿。
方法 40 名参与者在两个单独的会话中生成单音节词,这两个会话在初始暴露阶段给出的听觉反馈不同。在 会话暴露阶段,反馈是正常的。在 会话暴露阶段,小的、随机的共振峰干扰被应用,降低了听觉反馈的可靠性。在每个会话中,随后的测试阶段引入了更大的不可预测的共振峰干扰。我们评估了这些更大的干扰在两个会话中是否会导致试验内补偿的幅度不同。
结果 与真实会话相比,在嘈杂会话中,向下(而非向上)共振峰干扰的补偿反应幅度更大。然而,在事后测试中,我们发现这种效应的幅度高度依赖于分析程序的选择。补偿幅度与其他生产措施(如共振峰变异性)无关,并且在会话之间没有可靠地相关。
结论 尽管我们的结果喜忧参半,但它们提供了一些初步的支持,即反馈控制系统监测感觉反馈的可靠性。考虑到听觉反馈补偿措施在分析选择和会话之间可能不稳定,必须谨慎解释这些结果。