A1 Journal article (refereed)
Coherence between brain activation and speech envelope at word and sentence levels showed age-related differences in low frequency bands (2021)


Kolozsvári, O. B., Xu, W., Gerike, G., Parviainen, T., Nieminen, L., Noiray, A., & Hämäläinen, J. A. (2021). Coherence between brain activation and speech envelope at word and sentence levels showed age-related differences in low frequency bands. Neurobiology of Language, 2(2), 226-253. https://doi.org/10.1162/nol_a_00033


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Publication details

All authors or editorsKolozsvári, Orsolya B; Xu, Weiyong; Gerike, Georgia; Parviainen, Tiina; Nieminen, Lea; Noiray, Aude; Hämäläinen, Jarmo A

Journal or seriesNeurobiology of Language

eISSN2641-4368

Publication year2021

Publication date03/03/2021

Volume2

Issue number2

Pages range226-253

PublisherMIT Press

Publication countryUnited States

Publication languageEnglish

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1162/nol_a_00033

Publication open accessOpenly available

Publication channel open accessOpen Access channel

Publication is parallel published (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/75482


Abstract

Speech perception is dynamic and shows changes across development. In parallel, functional differences in brain development over time have been well documented and these differences may interact with changes in speech perception during infancy and childhood. Further, there is evidence that the two hemispheres contribute unequally to speech segmentation at the sentence and phonemic levels.

To disentangle those contributions, we studied the cortical tracking of various sized units of speech that are crucial for spoken language processing in children (4.7-9.3 year-olds, N=34) and adults (N=19). We measured participants’ magnetoencephalogram (MEG) responses to syllables, words and sentences, calculated the coherence between the speech signal and MEG responses at the level of words and sentences, and further examined auditory evoked responses to syllables. Age-related differences were found for coherence values at the delta and theta frequency bands. Both frequency bands showed an effect of stimulus type, although this was attributed to the length of the stimulus and not linguistic unit size. There was no difference between hemispheres at the source level either in coherence values for word or sentence processing or in evoked response to syllables.

Results highlight the importance of the lower frequencies for speech tracking in the brain across different lexical units. Further, stimulus length affects the speech-brain associations suggesting methodological approaches should be selected carefully when studying speech envelope processing at the neural level. Speech tracking in the brain seems decoupled from more general maturation of the auditory cortex.


Keywordslanguage developmentperceptual psychologyauditory perceptionsspeech (phenomena)MEG

Free keywordsspeech perception; development; magnetoencephalography; speech tracking; coherence; auditory responses


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Ministry reportingYes

VIRTA submission year2021

JUFO rating0


Last updated on 2024-12-10 at 09:45