Right-Hemisphere Auditory Cortex Is Dominant for Coding Syllable Patterns in Speech
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 9 April 2008
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Society for Neuroscience in Journal of Neuroscience
- Vol. 28 (15) , 3958-3965
- https://doi.org/10.1523/jneurosci.0187-08.2008
Abstract
Cortical analysis of speech has long been considered the domain of left-hemisphere auditory areas. A recent hypothesis poses that cortical processing of acoustic signals, including speech, is mediated bilaterally based on the component rates inherent to the speech signal. In support of this hypothesis, previous studies have shown that slow temporal features (3–5 Hz) in nonspeech acoustic signals lateralize to right-hemisphere auditory areas, whereas rapid temporal features (20–50 Hz) lateralize to the left hemisphere. These results were obtained using nonspeech stimuli, and it is not known whether right-hemisphere auditory cortex is dominant for coding the slow temporal features in speech known as the speech envelope. Here we show strong right-hemisphere dominance for coding the speech envelope, which represents syllable patterns and is critical for normal speech perception. Right-hemisphere auditory cortex was 100% more accurate in following contours of the speech envelope and had a 33% larger response magnitude while following the envelope compared with the left hemisphere. Asymmetries were evident regardless of the ear of stimulation despite dominance of contralateral connections in ascending auditory pathways. Results provide evidence that the right hemisphere plays a specific and important role in speech processing and support the hypothesis that acoustic processing of speech involves the decomposition of the signal into constituent temporal features by rate-specialized neurons in right- and left-hemisphere auditory cortex.Keywords
This publication has 47 references indexed in Scilit:
- Phase Patterns of Neuronal Responses Reliably Discriminate Speech in Human Auditory CortexNeuron, 2007
- Spatial Representation of Neural Responses to Natural and Altered Conspecific Vocalizations in Cat Auditory CortexJournal of Neurophysiology, 2007
- Hemispheric asymmetry for spectral and temporal processing in the human antero‐lateral auditory belt cortexEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2005
- Evidence for rapid auditory perception as the foundation of speech processing: a sparse temporal sampling fMRI studyEuropean Journal of Neuroscience, 2004
- Temporal Envelope Processing in the Human Left and Right Auditory CorticesCerebral Cortex, 2004
- Recovering MeaningNeuron, 2001
- Speech Recognition with Primarily Temporal CuesScience, 1995
- Neurobiological Basis of Speech: A Case for the Preeminence of Temporal ProcessingAnnals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 1993
- Temporal information in speech: acoustic, auditory and linguistic aspectsPhilosophical Transactions Of The Royal Society B-Biological Sciences, 1992
- A Course in PhoneticsLanguage, 1977