Abstract
Using a continuous listening task, we evaluated the coupling between the listener's cortical activity and the temporal envelopes of different sounds in a multitalker auditory scene using magnetoencephalography and corticovocal coherence analysis. Neuromagnetic signals were recorded from 20 right-handed healthy adult humans who listened to five different recorded stories (attended speech streams), one without any multitalker background (No noise) and four mixed with a "cocktail party" multitalker background noise at four signal-to-noise ratios (5, 0, -5, and -10 dB) to produce speech-in-noise mixtures, here referred to as Global scene. Coherence analysis revealed that the modulations of the attended speech stream, presented without multitalker background, were coupled at similar to 0.5 Hz to the activity of both superior temporal gyri, whereas the modulations at 4-8 Hz were coupled to the activity of the right supratemporal auditory cortex. In cocktail party conditions, with the multitalker background noise, the coupling was at both frequencies stronger for the attended speech stream than for the unattended Multitalker background. The coupling strengths decreased as the Multitalker background increased. During the cocktail party conditions, the similar to 0.5 Hz coupling became left-hemisphere dominant, compared with bilateral coupling without the multitalker background, whereas the 4-8 Hz coupling remained right-hemisphere lateralized in both conditions. The brain activity was not coupled to the multitalker background or to its individual talkers. The results highlight the key role of listener's left superior temporal gyri in extracting the slow similar to 0.5 Hz modulations, likely reflecting the attended speech stream within a multitalker auditory scene.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1596-1606 |
Number of pages | 11 |
Journal | JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE |
Volume | 36 |
Issue number | 5 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 3 Feb 2016 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Keywords
- coherence analysis
- magnetoencephalography
- speech in noise
- BRAIN-WAVE RECOGNITION
- CORTICAL REPRESENTATION
- NEURONAL OSCILLATIONS
- SELECTIVE ATTENTION
- CORTEX
- COMPREHENSION
- IDENTIFICATION
- RESPONSES
- NETWORK
- PHASE
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