Literature DB >> 22462504

At what time is the cocktail party? A late locus of selective attention to natural speech.

Alan J Power1, John J Foxe, Emma-Jane Forde, Richard B Reilly, Edmund C Lalor.   

Abstract

Distinguishing between speakers and focusing attention on one speaker in multi-speaker environments is extremely important in everyday life. Exactly how the brain accomplishes this feat and, in particular, the precise temporal dynamics of this attentional deployment are as yet unknown. A long history of behavioral research using dichotic listening paradigms has debated whether selective attention to speech operates at an early stage of processing based on the physical characteristics of the stimulus or at a later stage during semantic processing. With its poor temporal resolution fMRI has contributed little to the debate, while EEG-ERP paradigms have been hampered by the need to average the EEG in response to discrete stimuli which are superimposed onto ongoing speech. This presents a number of problems, foremost among which is that early attention effects in the form of endogenously generated potentials can be so temporally broad as to mask later attention effects based on the higher level processing of the speech stream. Here we overcome this issue by utilizing the AESPA (auditory evoked spread spectrum analysis) method which allows us to extract temporally detailed responses to two concurrently presented speech streams in natural cocktail-party-like attentional conditions without the need for superimposed probes. We show attentional effects on exogenous stimulus processing in the 200-220 ms range in the left hemisphere. We discuss these effects within the context of research on auditory scene analysis and in terms of a flexible locus of attention that can be deployed at a particular processing stage depending on the task.
© 2012 The Authors. European Journal of Neuroscience © 2012 Federation of European Neuroscience Societies and Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22462504     DOI: 10.1111/j.1460-9568.2012.08060.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Neurosci        ISSN: 0953-816X            Impact factor:   3.386


  62 in total

1.  Neural decoding of attentional selection in multi-speaker environments without access to clean sources.

Authors:  James O'Sullivan; Zhuo Chen; Jose Herrero; Guy M McKhann; Sameer A Sheth; Ashesh D Mehta; Nima Mesgarani
Journal:  J Neural Eng       Date:  2017-08-04       Impact factor: 5.379

2.  Effects of Spectral Degradation on Attentional Modulation of Cortical Auditory Responses to Continuous Speech.

Authors:  Ying-Yee Kong; Ala Somarowthu; Nai Ding
Journal:  J Assoc Res Otolaryngol       Date:  2015-09-11

3.  Effects of auditory selective attention on neural phase: individual differences and short-term training.

Authors:  Aeron Laffere; Fred Dick; Adam Tierney
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2020-03-10       Impact factor: 6.556

4.  Cortical Tracking of Speech-in-Noise Develops from Childhood to Adulthood.

Authors:  Marc Vander Ghinst; Mathieu Bourguignon; Maxime Niesen; Vincent Wens; Sergio Hassid; Georges Choufani; Veikko Jousmäki; Riitta Hari; Serge Goldman; Xavier De Tiège
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-02-11       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 5.  Machine Learning Approaches to Analyze Speech-Evoked Neurophysiological Responses.

Authors:  Zilong Xie; Rachel Reetzke; Bharath Chandrasekaran
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2019-03-25       Impact factor: 2.297

6.  Neural tracking of attended versus ignored speech is differentially affected by hearing loss.

Authors:  Eline Borch Petersen; Malte Wöstmann; Jonas Obleser; Thomas Lunner
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2016-10-05       Impact factor: 2.714

7.  Differential modulation of auditory responses to attended and unattended speech in different listening conditions.

Authors:  Ying-Yee Kong; Ala Mullangi; Nai Ding
Journal:  Hear Res       Date:  2014-08-11       Impact factor: 3.208

8.  Attentional Selection in a Cocktail Party Environment Can Be Decoded from Single-Trial EEG.

Authors:  James A O'Sullivan; Alan J Power; Nima Mesgarani; Siddharth Rajaram; John J Foxe; Barbara G Shinn-Cunningham; Malcolm Slaney; Shihab A Shamma; Edmund C Lalor
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 5.357

9.  Semantic Context Enhances the Early Auditory Encoding of Natural Speech.

Authors:  Michael P Broderick; Andrew J Anderson; Edmund C Lalor
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2019-08-01       Impact factor: 6.167

10.  Attention selectively modulates cortical entrainment in different regions of the speech spectrum.

Authors:  Lucas S Baltzell; Cort Horton; Yi Shen; Virginia M Richards; Michael D'Zmura; Ramesh Srinivasan
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  2016-05-16       Impact factor: 3.252

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