150 Psychologie
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The ability to extract regularities from the environment is arguably an adaptive characteristic of intelligent systems. In the context of speech, statistical learning is thought to be an important mechanism for language acquisition. By considering individual differences in speech auditory-motor synchronization, an independent component analysis of fMRI data revealed that the neural substrates of statistical word form learning are not fully shared across individuals. While a network of auditory and superior pre/motor regions is universally activated in the process of learning, a fronto-parietal network is instead additionally and selectively engaged by some individuals, boosting their performance. Furthermore, interfering with the use of this network via articulatory suppression (producing irrelevant speech during learning) normalizes performance across the entire sample. Our work provides novel insights on language-related statistical learning and reconciles previous contrasting findings, while highlighting the need to factor in fundamental individual differences for a precise characterization of cognitive phenomena.
Research points to neurofunctional differences underlying fluent speech production in stutterers and non-stutterers. There has been considerably less work focusing on the processes that underlie stuttered speech, primarily due to the difficulty of reliably eliciting stuttering in the unnatural contexts associated with neuroimaging experiments. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to test the hypothesis that stuttering events result from global motor inhibition–a “freeze” response typically characterized by increased beta power in nodes of the action-stopping network. We leveraged a novel clinical interview to develop participant-specific stimuli in order to elicit a comparable amount of stuttered and fluent trials. Twenty-nine adult stutterers participated. The paradigm included a cue prior to a go signal, which allowed us to isolate processes associated with stuttered and fluent trials prior to speech initiation. During this pre-speech time window, stuttered trials were associated with greater beta power in the right pre-supplementary motor area, a key node in the action-stopping network, compared to fluent trials. Beta power in the right pre-supplementary area was related to a clinical measure of stuttering severity. We also found that anticipated words identified independently by participants were stuttered more often than those generated by the researchers, which were based on the participants’ reported anticipated sounds. This suggests that global motor inhibition results from stuttering anticipation. This study represents the largest comparison of stuttered and fluent speech to date. The findings provide a foundation for clinical trials that test the efficacy of neuromodulation on stuttering. Moreover, our study demonstrates the feasibility of using our approach for eliciting stuttering during MEG and functional magnetic resonance imaging experiments so that the neurobiological bases of stuttered speech can be further elucidated.
Speech imagery (the ability to generate internally quasi-perceptual experiences of speech) is a fundamental ability linked to cognitive functions such as inner speech, phonological working memory, and predictive processing. Speech imagery is also considered an ideal tool to test theories of overt speech. The study of speech imagery is challenging, primarily because of the absence of overt behavioral output as well as the difficulty in temporally aligning imagery events across trials and individuals. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) paired with temporal-generalization-based neural decoding and a simple behavioral protocol to determine the processing stages underlying speech imagery. We monitored participants’ lip and jaw micromovements during mental imagery of syllable production using electromyography. Decoding participants’ imagined syllables revealed a sequence of task-elicited representations. Importantly, participants’ micromovements did not discriminate between syllables. The decoded sequence of neuronal patterns maps well onto the predictions of current computational models of overt speech motor control and provides evidence for hypothesized internal and external feedback loops for speech planning and production, respectively. Additionally, the results expose the compressed nature of representations during planning which contrasts with the natural rate at which internal productions unfold. We conjecture that the same sequence underlies the motor-based generation of sensory predictions that modulate speech perception as well as the hypothesized articulatory loop of phonological working memory. The results underscore the potential of speech imagery, based on new experimental approaches and analytical methods, and further pave the way for successful non-invasive brain-computer interfaces.