Abstract

Neural oscillations have been linked to various perceptual and cognitive brain operations. Here, we examined the role of these induced brain responses in categorical speech perception (CP), a phenomenon in which similar features are mapped to discrete, common identities despite their equidistant/continuous physical spacing. We recorded neuroelectric activity while participants rapidly classified sounds along a vowel continuum (/u/ to /a/). Time–frequency analyses applied to the EEG revealed distinct temporal dynamics in induced (non-phase locked) oscillations; increased β (15–30Hz) coded prototypical vowel sounds carrying well-defined phonetic categories whereas increased γ (50–70Hz) accompanied ambiguous tokens near the categorical boundary. Notably, changes in β activity were strongly correlated with the slope of listeners’ psychometric identification functions, a measure of the “steepness” of their categorical percept. Our findings demonstrate that in addition to previously observed evoked (phase-locked) correlates of CP, induced brain activity in the β-band codes the ambiguity and strength of categorical speech percepts.

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