Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood
In multitalker backgrounds, the auditory cortex of adult humans tracks the attended speech stream rather than the global auditory scene. Still, it is unknown whether such preferential tracking also occurs in children whose speech-in-noise (SiN) abilities are typically lower compared with adults. We...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1454552023-03-05T16:44:58Z Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood Vander Ghinst, Marc Bourguignon, Mathieu Niesen, Maxime Wens, Vincent Hassid, Sergio Choufani, Georges Jousmäki, Veikko Hari, Riitta Goldman, Serge De Tiège, Xavier Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Cognitive Neuroimaging Centre Science::Medicine Coherence Analysis Magnetoencephalography In multitalker backgrounds, the auditory cortex of adult humans tracks the attended speech stream rather than the global auditory scene. Still, it is unknown whether such preferential tracking also occurs in children whose speech-in-noise (SiN) abilities are typically lower compared with adults. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate the frequency-specific cortical tracking of different elements of a cocktail party auditory scene in 20 children (age range, 6-9 years; 8 females) and 20 adults (age range, 21-40 years; 10 females). During MEG recordings, subjects attended to four different 5 min stories, mixed with different levels of multitalker background at four signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs; noiseless, +5, 0, and -5 dB). Coherence analysis quantified the coupling between the time courses of the MEG activity and attended speech stream, multitalker background, or global auditory scene, respectively. In adults, statistically significant coherence was observed between MEG signals originating from the auditory system and the attended stream at <1, 1-4, and 4-8 Hz in all SNR conditions. Children displayed similar coupling at <1 and 1-4 Hz, but increasing noise impaired the coupling more strongly than in adults. Also, children displayed drastically lower coherence at 4-8 Hz in all SNR conditions. These results suggest that children's difficulties to understand speech in noisy conditions are related to an immature selective cortical tracking of the attended speech streams. Our results also provide unprecedented evidence for an acquired cortical tracking of speech at syllable rate and argue for a progressive development of SiN abilities in humans. Published version 2020-12-22T04:18:25Z 2020-12-22T04:18:25Z 2019 Journal Article Vander Ghinst, M., Bourguignon, M., Niesen, M., Wens, V., Hassid, S., Choufani, G., . . . De Tiège, X. (2019). Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood. The Journal of Neuroscience, 39(15), 2938-2950. doi:10.1523/jneurosci.1732-18.2019 0270-6474 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145455 10.1523/jneurosci.1732-18.2019 30745419 15 39 2938 2950 en The Journal of Neuroscience © 2019 The Author(s) (published by Society for Neuroscience). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf |
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Science::Medicine Coherence Analysis Magnetoencephalography Vander Ghinst, Marc Bourguignon, Mathieu Niesen, Maxime Wens, Vincent Hassid, Sergio Choufani, Georges Jousmäki, Veikko Hari, Riitta Goldman, Serge De Tiège, Xavier Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
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In multitalker backgrounds, the auditory cortex of adult humans tracks the attended speech stream rather than the global auditory scene. Still, it is unknown whether such preferential tracking also occurs in children whose speech-in-noise (SiN) abilities are typically lower compared with adults. We used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to investigate the frequency-specific cortical tracking of different elements of a cocktail party auditory scene in 20 children (age range, 6-9 years; 8 females) and 20 adults (age range, 21-40 years; 10 females). During MEG recordings, subjects attended to four different 5 min stories, mixed with different levels of multitalker background at four signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs; noiseless, +5, 0, and -5 dB). Coherence analysis quantified the coupling between the time courses of the MEG activity and attended speech stream, multitalker background, or global auditory scene, respectively. In adults, statistically significant coherence was observed between MEG signals originating from the auditory system and the attended stream at <1, 1-4, and 4-8 Hz in all SNR conditions. Children displayed similar coupling at <1 and 1-4 Hz, but increasing noise impaired the coupling more strongly than in adults. Also, children displayed drastically lower coherence at 4-8 Hz in all SNR conditions. These results suggest that children's difficulties to understand speech in noisy conditions are related to an immature selective cortical tracking of the attended speech streams. Our results also provide unprecedented evidence for an acquired cortical tracking of speech at syllable rate and argue for a progressive development of SiN abilities in humans. |
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Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) |
author_facet |
Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine (LKCMedicine) Vander Ghinst, Marc Bourguignon, Mathieu Niesen, Maxime Wens, Vincent Hassid, Sergio Choufani, Georges Jousmäki, Veikko Hari, Riitta Goldman, Serge De Tiège, Xavier |
format |
Article |
author |
Vander Ghinst, Marc Bourguignon, Mathieu Niesen, Maxime Wens, Vincent Hassid, Sergio Choufani, Georges Jousmäki, Veikko Hari, Riitta Goldman, Serge De Tiège, Xavier |
author_sort |
Vander Ghinst, Marc |
title |
Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
title_short |
Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
title_full |
Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
title_fullStr |
Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
title_full_unstemmed |
Cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
title_sort |
cortical tracking of speech-in-noise develops from childhood to adulthood |
publishDate |
2020 |
url |
https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145455 |
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1759858367108481024 |