| Literature DB >> 26924976 |
Abstract
Cortical speech processing is dependent on the mutual interdependence of two distinctive processing streams supporting sound-to-meaning (i.e., ventral stream) and sound-to-articulation (i.e., dorsal stream) mapping. Here, we compared the strengths of intracranial functional connectivity between two main hubs of the dorsal stream, namely the left auditory-related cortex (ARC) and Broca's region, in a sample of simultaneous interpreters (SIs) and multilingual control subjects while the participants performed a mixed and unmixed auditory semantic decision task. Under normal listening conditions such kind of tasks are known to initiate a spread of activation along the ventral stream. However, due to extensive and specific training, here we predicted that SIs will more strongly recruit the dorsal pathway in order to pre-activate the speech codes of the corresponding translation. In line with this reasoning, EEG results demonstrate increased left-hemispheric theta phase synchronization in SLI compared to multilingual control participants during early task-related processing stages. In addition, within the SI group functional connectivity strength in the left dorsal pathway was positively related to the cumulative number of training hours across lifespan, and inversely correlated with the age of training commencement. Hence, we propose that the alignment of neuronal oscillations between brain regions involved in "hearing" and "speaking" results from an intertwining of training, sensitive period, and predisposition.Entities:
Keywords: EEG; dorsal stream; functional connectivity; lexical decision task; simultaneous interpreters
Year: 2016 PMID: 26924976 PMCID: PMC4759282 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2016.00060
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Autobiographical and behavioral data of the participants.
| Subjects | Gender | Age | AOA [E] | Years of experience as SI | Listening [E] | AOA [foreign languages] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | f | 39 | 13 | 10 | c1 | French (5, 4), Hebrew (17, 4), Italian (17, 2), Spanish (34, 3) |
| 2 | f | 46 | 12 | 24 | c1 | French (5, 3), Spanish (23, 3) |
| 3 | f | 40 | 16 | 8 | c1 | French (4, 3), Italian (30, 3) |
| 4 | f | 44 | 14 | 20 | c1 | French (12, 4), Spanish (16, 3), Italian (25, 3) |
| 5 | f | 42 | 10 | 15 | c1 | French (12, 4), Italian (22, 4), Spanish (32, 3) |
| 6 | f | 34 | 11 | 4 | c1 | French (20, 4), Italian (22, 2) |
| 7 | m | 40 | 14 | 9 | c1 | French (12, 4), Spanish (21, 3) |
| 8 | f | 48 | 14 | 8 | c1 | French (birth, 4), Spanish (21, 4), Italian (23, 3), Portuguese (47, 2) |
| 9 | f | 35 | 12 | 8 | c2 | Italian (15, 3), French (13, 3) |
| 10 | f | 26 | 6 | 1 | c2 | French (10, 3), Spanish (22, 3), Serbian (26, 2) |
| 11 | m | 33 | 14 | 3 | c2 | French (14, 3), Italian (17, 2), Swedish (32, 1) |
| 12 | f | 28 | 13 | 1 | b2 | French (13, 4), Spanish (15, 4) |
| 13 | f | 32 | 15 | c1 | French (12, 2), Spanish (28, 1) | |
| 14 | m | 37 | 13 | b2 | French (11, 3), Italian (15, 3) | |
| 15 | f | 46 | 12 | c1 | French (3, 4), Italian (11, 4) | |
| 16 | m | 42 | 15 | c1 | French (15, 1) | |
| 17 | f | 33 | 16 | c2 | French (13, 4) | |
| 18 | f | 38 | 12 | c1 | French (11, 4), Amharic (23, 3), Tamil (16, 3), Romanian (23, 1) | |
| 19 | f | 38 | 13 | c1 | French (10, 4), Italian (16, 4), Spanish (21, 3), Indonesian (23, 1), Russian (24, 1) | |
| 20 | f | 40 | 12 | c2 | French (4, 3), Italian (22, 3), Spanish (29, 4) | |
| 21 | m | 37 | 13 | c1 | Turkish (3, 4), French (11, 4) | |
| 22 | f | 40 | 13 | c1 | French (13, 4), Italian (16, 3), Spanish (24, 2) | |
| 23 | f | 48 | 14 | c1 | Spanish (23, 2), French (23, 1) | |
| 24 | f | 37 | 11 | b2 | French (12, 4) |
AOA [E], age of English acquisition; Listening [E], English listening comprehension proficiency, according to the common European framework of reference for languages (ranging from a1 to c2). AOA [foreign languages], Age of acquisition of foreign languages: the first number between brackets refers to the AOA, the second one to the self-estimated proficiency in the range from 1 to 6.
Figure 1Regions of interest (ROIs) position within the 3D MNI space. Left: transversal view; middle: sagittal view; right: coronal view.
Figure 2Behavioral results of the semantic decision task. SLI, simultaneous language interpreters; C, multilingual control participants; GG, German-German; GE, German-English; EG, English-German; EE, English-English. Error bars depict standard error. ***p < 0.001.
Figure 3Functional connectivity values between the left ARC and Broca’s region are depicted separately for the 2 groups, the 2 processing stages (i.e., 1. PS and 2. PS), and the 4 language directions. GG, German-German; GE, German-English; EG, English-German; EE, English-English. Error bars indicate standard error. *p < 0.05.
Figure 4This figure shows the negative correlation between mean functional connectivity and age of training commencement (A), and the positive relationship between cumulative number of training hours and mean connectivity (partial correlation) (B). The partial correlation is depicted by plotting residual values of training (age) against connectivity (age).