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Human cortical encoding of pitch in tonal and non-tonal languages

Linguistics and Languages

Human cortical encoding of pitch in tonal and non-tonal languages

Y. Li, C. Tang, et al.

Discover how tonal languages like Mandarin Chinese uniquely shape brain responses to pitch distinctions compared to non-tonal languages like English. This fascinating research by Yuanning Li, Claire Tang, Junfeng Lu, Jinsong Wu, and Edward F. Chang reveals language-specific sensitivities in auditory processing, suggesting a dynamic interaction between language and cortical features in speech perception.... show more
Abstract
Languages can use a common repertoire of vocal sounds to signify distinct meanings. In tonal languages, such as Mandarin Chinese, pitch contours of syllables distinguish one word from another, whereas in non-tonal languages, such as English, pitch is used to convey intonation. The neural computations underlying language specialization in speech perception are unknown. Here, we use a cross-linguistic approach to address this. Native Mandarin- and English-speaking participants each listened to both Mandarin and English speech, while neural activity was directly recorded from the non-primary auditory cortex. Both groups show language-general coding of speaker-invariant pitch at the single electrode level. At the electrode population level, we find language-specific distribution of cortical tuning parameters in Mandarin speakers only, with enhanced sensitivity to Mandarin tone categories. Our results show that speech perception relies upon a shared cortical auditory feature processing mechanism, which may be tuned to the statistics of a given language.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Feb 19, 2021
Authors
Yuanning Li, Claire Tang, Junfeng Lu, Jinsong Wu, Edward F. Chang
Tags
tonal languages
pitch coding
Mandarin Chinese
English
cortical tuning
speech perception
auditory processing
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