| Literature DB >> 26804355 |
Elaine C Thompson1,2, Kali Woodruff Carr1,2, Travis White-Schwoch1,2, Adam Tierney1,2, Trent Nicol1,2, Nina Kraus1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
Speech signals contain information in hierarchical time scales, ranging from short-duration (e.g., phonemes) to long-duration cues (e.g., syllables, prosody). A theoretical framework to understand how the brain processes this hierarchy suggests that hemispheric lateralization enables specialized tracking of acoustic cues at different time scales, with the left and right hemispheres sampling at short (25 ms; 40 Hz) and long (200 ms; 5 Hz) periods, respectively. In adults, both speech-evoked and endogenous cortical rhythms are asymmetrical: low-frequency rhythms predominate in right auditory cortex, and high-frequency rhythms in left auditory cortex. It is unknown, however, whether endogenous resting state oscillations are similarly lateralized in children. We investigated cortical oscillations in children (3-5 years; N = 65) at rest and tested our hypotheses that this temporal asymmetry is evident early in life and facilitates recognition of speech in noise. We found a systematic pattern of increasing leftward asymmetry for higher frequency oscillations; this pattern was more pronounced in children who better perceived words in noise. The observed connection between left-biased cortical oscillations in phoneme-relevant frequencies and speech-in-noise perception suggests hemispheric specialization of endogenous oscillatory activity may support speech processing in challenging listening environments, and that this infrastructure is present during early childhood.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26804355 PMCID: PMC4726126 DOI: 10.1038/srep19737
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1High-frequency resting oscillations are left-lateralized in children.
Linear regression of spectral power reveals cerebral asymmetry at high (20-50 Hz) but not low (3-7 Hz) frequencies. The extent of left asymmetry increases with increasing frequencies into the gamma range. The shaded region represents one standard error.
A tercile split of speech-in-noise perception performance grouped the children into “Good”, “Average”, and “Poor” perceivers.
| Speech-in-noise perception Group | Age (months, with SD) |
|---|---|
| Good | 50.2 (8.5) |
| Average | 50.81 (6.2) |
| Poor | 44.94 (6.4) |
Figure 2Children who are better perceivers of speech in noise have stronger left-lateralization of high-frequency endogenous oscillations.
Figure 3High-frequency cortical oscillatory activity was more left lateralized for children who were better perceivers of speech in noise.
Topographic plots show the distribution of high-frequency (20–50 Hz) oscillations in good (left) and poor (right) perceivers of speech in noise. Red indicates more spectral power, and a leftwards bias for high-frequency oscillations is evident, particularly in the good speech-in-noise perception group.