Expectations boost the reconstruction of auditory features from electrophysiological responses to noisy speech

Archive ouverte

Corcoran, Andrew, W | Perera, Ricardo | Koroma, Matthieu | Kouider, Sid | Hohwy, Jakob | Andrillon, Thomas

Edité par CCSD ; Oxford University Press (OUP) -

International audience. Online speech processing imposes significant computational demands on the listening brain, the underlying mechanisms of which remain poorly understood. Here, we exploit the perceptual “pop-out” phenomenon (i.e. the dramatic improvement of speech intelligibility after receiving information about speech content) to investigate the neurophysiological effects of prior expectations on degraded speech comprehension. We recorded electroencephalography (EEG) and pupillometry from 21 adults while they rated the clarity of noise-vocoded and sine-wave synthesized sentences. Pop-out was reliably elicited following visual presentation of the corresponding written sentence, but not following incongruent or neutral text. Pop-out was associated with improved reconstruction of the acoustic stimulus envelope from low-frequency EEG activity, implying that improvements in perceptual clarity were mediated via top-down signals that enhanced the quality of cortical speech representations. Spectral analysis further revealed that pop-out was accompanied by a reduction in theta-band power, consistent with predictive coding accounts of acoustic filling-in and incremental sentence processing. Moreover, delta-band power, alpha-band power, and pupil diameter were all increased following the provision of any written sentence information, irrespective of content. Together, these findings reveal distinctive profiles of neurophysiological activity that differentiate the content-specific processes associated with degraded speech comprehension from the context-specific processes invoked under adverse listening conditions.

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Sleepers Selectively Suppress Informative Inputs during Rapid Eye Movements

Archive ouverte | Koroma, Matthieu | CCSD

International audience. Sleep leads to a disconnection from the external world. Even when sleepers regain consciousness duringrapid eye movement (REM) sleep, little, if any, external information is incorporated into...

Sleepers track informative speech in a multitalker environment

Archive ouverte | Legendre, Guillaume | CCSD

International audience

Formation and suppression of acoustic memories during human sleep

Archive ouverte | Andrillon, Thomas | CCSD

International audience

Chargement des enrichissements...