Abstract

The extent to which non-linguistic auditory processing deficits may contribute to the phenomenology of primary progressive aphasia is not established. Using non-linguistic stimuli devoid of meaning we assessed three key domains of auditory processing (pitch, timing and timbre) in a consecutive series of 18 patients with primary progressive aphasia (eight with semantic variant, six with non-fluent/agrammatic variant, and four with logopenic variant), as well as 28 age-matched healthy controls. We further examined whether performance on the psychoacoustic tasks in the three domains related to the patients' speech and language and neuropsychological profile. At the group level, patients were significantly impaired in the three domains. Patients had the most marked deficits within the rhythm domain for the processing of short sequences of up to seven tones. Patients with the non-fluent variant showed the most pronounced deficits at the group and the individual level. A subset of patients with the semantic variant were also impaired, though less severely. The patients with the logopenic variant did not show any significant impairments. Significant deficits in the non-fluent and the semantic variant remained after partialling out effects of executive dysfunction. Performance on a subset of the psychoacoustic tests correlated with conventional verbal repetition tests. In sum, a core central auditory impairment exists in primary progressive aphasia for non-linguistic stimuli. While the non-fluent variant is clinically characterized by a motor speech deficit (output problem), perceptual processing of tone sequences is clearly deficient. This may indicate the co-occurrence in the non-fluent variant of a deficit in working memory for auditory objects. Parsimoniously we propose that auditory timing pathways are altered, which are used in common for processing acoustic sequence structure in both speech output and acoustic input.

Highlights

  • Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is characterized by progressive word finding difficulties caused by selective neurodegeneration of the language network (Mesulam et al., 2014)

  • For the 10 adaptively controlled tasks, the graphs demonstrate the reliable course with a general decrease of respective difference between reference and target, and the reaching of a plateau, typically from trial 25 onward

  • Using non-linguistic stimuli we performed a systematic investigation of auditory processing in the pitch, rhythm and timbre domain in PPA at a level of processing that does not depend on any association with long-term memory, emotion or meaning

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Summary

Introduction

Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is characterized by progressive word finding difficulties caused by selective neurodegeneration of the language network (Mesulam et al., 2014). Depending on the subtype (Gorno-Tempini et al., 2011), the word finding problems may be accompanied by word comprehension and object recognition deficits, as in the semantic variant (SV) (Hodges et al, 1992); speech apraxia or agrammatism may be most prominent, as in the non-fluent/agrammatic variant (NFV) (Grossman, 2012); or phonological working memory deficits may cause deficits repeating series of numbers and complex sentences, as in the logopenic variant (LV) (Gorno-Tempini et al, 2004, 2008; Mesulam et al, 2012). The purpose of the current study was 2-fold: at the basic neuroscience level to evaluate how language and speech relate to core auditory analysis of pitch, rhythm and timbre; and at the clinical level, to examine how deficits in non-verbal sound processing relate to the pathogenesis of clinical symptoms in PPA. For pitch (Patterson et al., 2002), time (Teki et al, 2011) and timbre (Overath et al., 2008, 2010), extensive processing occurs in areas beyond primary auditory cortex, especially at higher levels of complexity or longer temporal windows of integration

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