Abstract

Repeated stimulus presentation leads to neural adaptation and consequent amplitude reduction in vowel‐evoked envelope following responses (EFRs)—a response that reflects neural activity phase‐locked to envelope periodicity. EFRs are elicited by vowels presented in isolation or in the context of other phonemes such as consonants in syllables. While context phonemes could exert some forward influence on vowel‐evoked EFRs, they may reduce the degree of adaptation. Here, we evaluated whether the properties of context phonemes between consecutive vowel stimuli influence adaptation. EFRs were elicited by the low‐frequency first formant (resolved harmonics) and middle‐to‐high‐frequency second and higher formants (unresolved harmonics) of a male‐spoken /i/ when the presence, number and predictability of context phonemes (/s/, /a/, /∫/ and /u/) between vowel repetitions varied. Monitored over four iterations of /i/, adaptation was evident only for EFRs elicited by the unresolved harmonics. EFRs elicited by the unresolved harmonics decreased in amplitude by ~16–20 nV (10%–17%) after the first presentation of /i/ and remained stable thereafter. EFR adaptation was reduced by the presence of a context phoneme, but the reduction did not change with their number or predictability. The presence of a context phoneme, however, attenuated EFRs by a degree similar to that caused by adaptation (~21–23 nV). Such a trade‐off in the short‐ and long‐term influence of context phonemes suggests that the benefit of interleaving EFR‐eliciting vowels with other context phonemes depends on whether the use of consonant‐vowel syllables is critical to improve the validity of EFR applications.

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