Linking Speech Perception and Neurophysiology: Speech Decoding Guided by Cascaded Oscillators Locked to the Input Rhythm
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 January 2011
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Frontiers Media SA in Frontiers in Psychology
- Vol. 2, 130
- https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00130
Abstract
The premise of this study is that current models of speech perception, which are driven by acoustic features alone, are incomplete, and that the role of decoding time during memory access must be incorporated to account for the patterns of observed recognition phenomena. It is postulated that decoding time is governed by a cascade of neuronal oscillators, which guide template-matching operations at a hierarchy of temporal scales. Cascaded cortical oscillations in the theta, beta, and gamma frequency bands are argued to be crucial for speech intelligibility. Intelligibility is high so long as these oscillations remain phase locked to the auditory input rhythm. A model (Tempo) is presented which is capable of emulating recent psychophysical data on the intelligibility of speech sentences as a function of “packaging” rate (Ghitza and Greenberg, 2009). The data show that intelligibility of speech that is time-compressed by a factor of 3 (i.e., a high syllabic rate) is poor (above 50% word error rate), but is substantially restored when the information stream is re-packaged by the insertion of silent gaps in between successive compressed-signal intervals – a counterintuitive finding, difficult to explain using classical models of speech perception, but emerging naturally from the Tempo architecture.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Neurophysiological origin of human brain asymmetry for speech and languageProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010
- Auditory Cortex Tracks Both Auditory and Visual Stimulus Dynamics Using Low-Frequency Neuronal Phase ModulationPLoS Biology, 2010
- Neuronal synchrony reveals working memory networks and predicts individual memory capacityProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2010
- Temporal Envelope of Time-Compressed Speech Represented in the Human Auditory CortexJournal of Neuroscience, 2009
- Representation of Time-Varying Stimuli by a Network Exhibiting Oscillations on a Faster Time ScalePLoS Computational Biology, 2009
- Low-frequency neuronal oscillations as instruments of sensory selectionPublished by Elsevier ,2008
- Spatiotemporal dynamics of word processing in the human brainFrontiers in Neuroscience, 2007
- The Ups and Downs of Neural Progenitors: Cep120 and TACCs Control Interkinetic Nuclear MigrationNeuron, 2007
- Phase Patterns of Neuronal Responses Reliably Discriminate Speech in Human Auditory CortexNeuron, 2007
- Phase Synchrony among Neuronal Oscillations in the Human CortexJournal of Neuroscience, 2005