Abstract

SummaryDue to their periodic nature, neural oscillations might represent an optimal “tool” for the processing of rhythmic stimulus input [1, 2, 3]. Indeed, the alignment of neural oscillations to a rhythmic stimulus, often termed phase entrainment, has been repeatedly demonstrated [4, 5, 6, 7]. Phase entrainment is central to current theories of speech processing [8, 9, 10] and has been associated with successful speech comprehension [11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17]. However, typical manipulations that reduce speech intelligibility (e.g., addition of noise and time reversal [11, 12, 14, 16, 17]) could destroy critical acoustic cues for entrainment (such as “acoustic edges” [7]). Hence, the association between phase entrainment and speech intelligibility might only be “epiphenomenal”; i.e., both decline due to the same manipulation, without any causal link between the two [18]. Here, we use transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS [19]) to manipulate the phase lag between neural oscillations and speech rhythm while measuring neural responses to intelligible and unintelligible vocoded stimuli with sparse fMRI. We found that this manipulation significantly modulates the BOLD response to intelligible speech in the superior temporal gyrus, and the strength of BOLD modulation is correlated with a phasic modulation of performance in a behavioral task. Importantly, these findings are absent for unintelligible speech and during sham stimulation; we thus demonstrate that phase entrainment has a specific, causal influence on neural responses to intelligible speech. Our results not only provide an important step toward understanding the neural foundation of human abilities at speech comprehension but also suggest new methods for enhancing speech perception that can be explored in the future.

Highlights

  • To determine whether phase entrainment has a causal role in modulating neural responses, we used fMRI combined with transcranial alternating current stimulation at 3.125 Hz over left lateral temporal regions (Figure 1A)

  • We measured the consequences for neural responses to sentences consisting of five rhythmically spoken one-syllable words that were noise-vocoded to manipulate speech intelligibility (16-channel vocoded, i.e., intelligible, or 1-channel vocoded, i.e., unintelligible)

  • Vocoded speech manipulates intelligibility while preserving critical elements of the speech rhythm. This allowed us to determine whether phase entrainment modulates neural responses for auditory processing per se or in a speech-specific fashion

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Summary

SUMMARY

Due to their periodic nature, neural oscillations might represent an optimal ‘‘tool’’ for the processing of rhythmic stimulus input [1,2,3]. We use transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS [19]) to manipulate the phase lag between neural oscillations and speech rhythm while measuring neural responses to intelligible and unintelligible vocoded stimuli with sparse fMRI. We found that this manipulation significantly modulates the BOLD response to intelligible speech in the superior temporal gyrus, and the strength of BOLD modulation is correlated with a phasic modulation of performance in a behavioral task. Our results provide an important step toward understanding the neural foundation of human abilities at speech comprehension and suggest new methods for enhancing speech perception that can be explored in the future

RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
B Observed vs Surrogate Data stim sham
METHOD DETAILS
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