Who said what? The effects of speech tempo on target detection and information extraction
in a multi-talker situation: An ERP and functional connectivity study.
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Támogató: NKFIH
Szakterületek:
Idegtudományok (benne pszichofiziológia)
Orvos- és egészségtudomány
Pszichológia
People with normal hearing can usually follow one of the several concurrent speakers.
Speech tempo affects both the separation of concurrent speech streams and information
extraction from them. The current study varied the tempo of two concurrent speech
streams to investigate these processes in a multi‐talker situation. Listeners performed
a target‐detection and a content‐tracking task, while target‐related ERPs and functional
brain networks sensitive to speech tempo were extracted from the EEG signal. At slower
than normal speech tempo, building the two streams required longer processing times,
and possibly the utilization of higher‐order, for example, syntactic and semantic
cues. The observed longer reaction times and higher connectivity strength in a theta
band network associated with frontal control over auditory/speech processing are compatible
with this notion. With increasing tempo, target detection performance decreased and
the N2b and the P3b amplitudes increased. These data suggest an increased need for
strictly allocating target‐detection‐related resources at higher tempo. This was also
reflected by the observed increase in the strength of gamma‐band networks within and
between frontal, temporal, and cingular areas. At the fastest tested speech tempo,
there was a sharp drop in recognition memory performance, while target detection performance
increased compared to the normal speech tempo. This was accompanied by a significant
increase in the strength of a low alpha network associated with the suppression of
task‐irrelevant speech. These results suggest that participants prioritized the immediate
target detection task over the continuous content tracking, likely due to some capacity
limit reached the fastest speech tempo.