Attaheri Adam, Ní Choisdealbha Áine, Rocha Sinead, Brusini Perrine, Di Liberto Giovanni M, Mead Natasha, Olawole-Scott Helen, Boutris Panagiotis, Gibbon Samuel, Williams Isabel, Grey Christina, Alfaro E Oliveira Maria, Brough Carmel, Flanagan Sheila, Goswami Usha
Department of Psychology, Centre for Neuroscience in Education, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Psychology and Sports Science, Anglia Ruskin University, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2024 Dec 5;19(12):e0313274. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0313274. eCollection 2024.
Cortical signals have been shown to track acoustic and linguistic properties of continuous speech. This phenomenon has been measured in both children and adults, reflecting speech understanding by adults as well as cognitive functions such as attention and prediction. Furthermore, atypical low-frequency cortical tracking of speech is found in children with phonological difficulties (developmental dyslexia). Accordingly, low-frequency cortical signals may play a critical role in language acquisition. A recent investigation with infants Attaheri et al., 2022 [1] probed cortical tracking mechanisms at the ages of 4, 7 and 11 months as participants listened to sung speech. Results from temporal response function (TRF), phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) and dynamic theta-delta power (PSD) analyses indicated speech envelope tracking and stimulus-related power (PSD) for delta and theta neural signals. Furthermore, delta- and theta-driven PAC was found at all ages, with theta phases displaying stronger PAC with high-frequency amplitudes than delta. The present study tests whether these previous findings replicate in the second half of the full cohort of infants (N = 122) who were participating in this longitudinal study (first half: N = 61, (1); second half: N = 61). In addition to demonstrating good replication, we investigate whether cortical tracking in the first year of life predicts later language acquisition for the full cohort (122 infants recruited, 113 retained) using both infant-led and parent-estimated measures and multivariate and univariate analyses. Increased delta cortical tracking in the univariate analyses, increased ~2Hz PSD power and stronger theta-gamma PAC in both multivariate and univariate analyses were related to better language outcomes using both infant-led and parent-estimated measures. By contrast, increased ~4Hz PSD power in the multi-variate analyses, increased delta-beta PAC and a higher theta/delta power ratio in the multi-variate analyses were related to worse language outcomes. The data are interpreted within a "Temporal Sampling" framework for developmental language trajectories.
皮层信号已被证明可追踪连续语音的声学和语言特性。这种现象在儿童和成人中均有测量,反映了成人的言语理解以及诸如注意力和预测等认知功能。此外,在有语音困难(发育性阅读障碍)的儿童中发现了非典型的低频皮层语音追踪。因此,低频皮层信号可能在语言习得中起关键作用。最近一项针对婴儿的研究(Attaheri等人,2022 [1])在4、7和11个月大的婴儿听歌唱语音时探究了皮层追踪机制。时间响应函数(TRF)、相位-振幅耦合(PAC)和动态θ-δ功率(PSD)分析的结果表明了语音包络追踪以及δ和θ神经信号的刺激相关功率(PSD)。此外,在所有年龄段均发现了δ和θ驱动的PAC,其中θ相位与高频振幅的PAC比δ更强。本研究测试了这些先前的发现是否能在参与这项纵向研究的全部婴儿队列(N = 122)的后半部分中得到重复(前半部分:N = 61,(1);后半部分:N = 61)。除了证明良好的重复性外,我们还使用婴儿主导和家长估计的测量方法以及多变量和单变量分析,研究了生命第一年的皮层追踪是否能预测整个队列(招募了122名婴儿,保留了113名)后期的语言习得情况。单变量分析中δ皮层追踪增加、多变量和单变量分析中2Hz PSD功率增加以及更强的θ-γ PAC,使用婴儿主导和家长估计的测量方法均与更好的语言结果相关。相比之下,多变量分析中4Hz PSD功率增加、多变量分析中δ-β PAC增加以及更高的θ/δ功率比与更差的语言结果相关。这些数据在发育性语言轨迹的“时间采样”框架内进行解释。