MacLean Jessica, Stirn Jack, Bidelman Gavin M
bioRxiv. 2024 Jul 19:2024.07.18.604167. doi: 10.1101/2024.07.18.604167.
Plasticity from auditory experience shapes the brain's encoding and perception of sound. Though prior research demonstrates that neural entrainment (i.e., brain-to-acoustic synchronization) aids speech perception, how long- and short-term plasticity influence entrainment to concurrent speech has not been investigated. Here, we explored neural entrainment mechanisms and the interplay between short- and long-term neuroplasticity for rapid auditory perceptual learning of concurrent speech sounds in young, normal-hearing musicians and nonmusicians.
Participants learned to identify double-vowel mixtures during ∼45 min training sessions with concurrent high-density EEG recordings. We examined the degree to which brain responses entrained to the speech-stimulus train (∼9 Hz) to investigate whether entrainment to speech prior to behavioral decision predicted task performance. Source and directed functional connectivity analyses of the EEG probed whether behavior was driven by group differences auditory-motor coupling.
Both musicians and nonmusicians showed rapid perceptual learning in accuracy with training. Interestingly, listeners' neural entrainment strength prior to target speech mixtures predicted behavioral identification performance; stronger neural synchronization was observed preceding incorrect compared to correct trial responses. We also found stark hemispheric biases in auditory-motor coupling during speech entrainment, with greater auditory-motor connectivity in the right compared to left hemisphere for musicians (R>L) but not in nonmusicians (R=L).
Our findings confirm stronger neuroacoustic synchronization and auditory-motor coupling during speech processing in musicians. Stronger neural entrainment to rapid stimulus trains preceding incorrect behavioral responses supports the notion that alpha-band (∼10 Hz) arousal/suppression in brain activity is an important modulator of trial-by-trial success in perceptual processing.
听觉经验的可塑性塑造了大脑对声音的编码和感知。尽管先前的研究表明神经同步(即大脑与声音的同步)有助于语音感知,但长期和短期可塑性如何影响对同时出现的语音的同步尚未得到研究。在这里,我们探索了神经同步机制以及短期和长期神经可塑性之间的相互作用,以研究年轻的、听力正常的音乐家和非音乐家对同时出现的语音声音进行快速听觉感知学习的情况。
参与者在约45分钟的训练过程中学习识别双元音混合音,并同时进行高密度脑电图记录。我们检查了大脑对语音刺激序列(约9赫兹)的同步程度,以研究在行为决策之前对语音的同步是否能预测任务表现。脑电图的源分析和定向功能连接分析探究了行为是否由听觉-运动耦合的组间差异驱动。
音乐家和非音乐家在训练过程中准确率都有快速的感知学习。有趣的是,听众在目标语音混合之前的神经同步强度预测了行为识别表现;与正确试验反应相比,在错误试验反应之前观察到更强的神经同步。我们还发现,在语音同步过程中,听觉-运动耦合存在明显的半球偏向,音乐家右半球的听觉-运动连接性比左半球更强(右>左),而非音乐家则没有(右=左)。
我们的研究结果证实了音乐家在语音处理过程中更强的神经声学同步和听觉-运动耦合。在错误行为反应之前对快速刺激序列更强的神经同步支持了这样一种观点,即大脑活动中的α波段(约10赫兹)唤醒/抑制是感知处理中逐次试验成功的重要调节因素。