Auditory and Communication Systems Laboratory, Department of Otorhinolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Head and Neck Surgery & Communication Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, North Carolina, USA.
Laryngoscope. 2023 Apr;133 Suppl 2(Suppl 2):S1-S10. doi: 10.1002/lary.30175. Epub 2022 May 11.
Hearing plays an important role in our ability to control voice, and perturbations in auditory feedback result in compensatory changes in vocal production. The auditory cortex (AC) has been proposed as an important mediator of this behavior, but causal evidence is lacking. We tested this in an animal model, hypothesizing that AC is necessary for vocal self-monitoring and feedback-dependent control, and that altering activity in AC during vocalization will interfere with vocal control.
We implanted two marmoset monkeys (Callithrix jacchus) with bilateral AC electrode arrays. Acoustic signals were recorded from vocalizing marmosets while altering vocal feedback or electrically stimulating AC during random subsets of vocalizations. Feedback was altered by real-time frequency shifts and presented through headphones and electrical stimulation delivered to individual electrodes. We analyzed recordings to measure changes in vocal acoustics during shifted feedback and stimulation, and to determine their interaction. Results were correlated with the location and frequency tuning of stimulation sites.
Consistent with previous results, we found electrical stimulation alone evoked changes in vocal production. Results were stronger in the right hemisphere, but decreased with lower currents or repeated stimulation. Simultaneous stimulation and shifted feedback significantly altered vocal control for a subset of sites, decreasing feedback compensation at some and increasing it at others. Inhibited compensation was more likely at sites closer to vocal frequencies.
Results provide causal evidence that the AC is involved in feedback-dependent vocal control, and that it is sufficient and may also be necessary to drive changes in vocal production.
N/A Laryngoscope, 133:1-10, 2023.
听觉在我们控制声音的能力中起着重要作用,听觉反馈的干扰会导致发声产生代偿性变化。听觉皮层(AC)被认为是这种行为的重要介导者,但缺乏因果证据。我们在动物模型中对此进行了测试,假设 AC 是发声自我监测和反馈依赖控制所必需的,并且在发声过程中改变 AC 的活动将干扰发声控制。
我们在两只狨猴(Callithrix jacchus)中植入双侧 AC 电极阵列。当通过耳机改变发声狨猴的反馈或在随机发声子集期间对 AC 进行电刺激时,记录发声的声学信号。通过实时频率移位来改变反馈,通过耳机呈现,并通过单独的电极进行电刺激。我们分析了录音,以测量在移位反馈和刺激期间发声声学的变化,并确定它们的相互作用。结果与刺激部位的位置和频率调谐相关。
与先前的结果一致,我们发现单独的电刺激会引起发声产生变化。右侧半球的结果更强,但随着电流降低或重复刺激而减少。同时刺激和移位反馈在一部分部位显著改变了发声控制,在一些部位减少了反馈补偿,而在另一些部位增加了补偿。在更接近发声频率的部位,抑制补偿的可能性更大。
结果提供了因果证据,表明 AC 参与了反馈依赖的发声控制,并且它足以驱动发声产生变化,并且可能也是必需的。
无。喉镜,133:1-10,2023。