Spatiotemporal dynamics of predictive brain mechanisms during speech processing: an MEG study.

Spatiotemporal dynamics of predictive brain mechanisms during speech processing: an MEG study. Brain Lang. 2020 Jan 30;203:104755 Authors: Liu Z, Shu S, Lu L, Ge J, Gao JH Abstract Rapid and efficient speech processing benefits from the prediction derived from prior expectations based on the identification of individual words. It is known that speech processing is carried out within a distributed frontotemporal network. However, the spatiotemporal causal dynamics of predictive brain mechanisms in sound-to-meaning mapping within this network remain unclear. Using magnetoencephalography, we adopted a semantic anomaly paradigm which consists of expected, unexpected and time-reversed Mandarin Chinese speech, and localized the effects of violated expectation in frontotemporal brain regions, the sensorimotor cortex and the supramarginal gyrus from 250 ms relative to the target words. By further investigating the causal cortical dynamics, we provided the description of the causal dynamic network within the framework of the dual stream model, and highlighted the importance of the connections within the ventral pathway, the top-down modulation from the left inferior frontal gyrus and the cross-stream integration during the speech processing of violated expectation. PMID: 32007671 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]
Source: Brain and Language - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Brain Lang Source Type: research