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Phonemic segmentation of narrative speech in human cerebral cortex

Linguistics and Languages

Phonemic segmentation of narrative speech in human cerebral cortex

X. L. Gong, A. G. Huth, et al.

Discover groundbreaking insights into phonemic processing with this fMRI study, revealing that the cortical regions involved are more extensive than previously believed. Conducted by Xue L. Gong, Alexander G. Huth, Fatma Deniz, Keith Johnson, Jack L. Gallant, and Frédéric E. Theunissen, this research uncovers the complexities of diphones and triphones representation in the brain, challenging existing notions about word retrieval and auditory perception.... show more
Abstract
Speech processing requires extracting meaning from acoustic patterns using a set of intermediate representations based on a dynamic segmentation of the speech stream. Using whole brain mapping obtained in fMRI, we investigate the locus of cortical phonemic processing not only for single phonemes but also for short combinations made of diphones and triphones. We find that phonemic processing areas are much larger than previously described: they include not only the classical areas in the dorsal superior temporal gyrus but also a larger region in the lateral temporal cortex where diphone features are best represented. These identified phonemic regions overlap with the lexical retrieval region, but we show that short word retrieval is not sufficient to explain the observed responses to diphones. Behavioral studies have shown that phonemic processing and lexical retrieval are intertwined. Here, we also have identified candidate regions within the speech cortical network where this joint processing occurs.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Jul 18, 2023
Authors
Xue L. Gong, Alexander G. Huth, Fatma Deniz, Keith Johnson, Jack L. Gallant, Frédéric E. Theunissen
Tags
phonemic processing
fMRI study
diphones
triphones
cortical regions
lexical retrieval
auditory perception
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