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Left Superior Temporal Gyrus Is Coupled to Attended Speech in a Cocktail-Party Auditory Scene.

Marc Vander GhinstMathieu BourguignonMarc Op de BeeckVincent WensBrice MartySergio HassidGeorges ChoufaniVeikko JousmäkiRiitta HariPatrick Van BogaertSerge GoldmanXavier De Tiège
Published in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2016)
When people listen to one person in a "cocktail party," their auditory cortex mainly follows the attended speech stream rather than the entire auditory scene. However, how the brain extracts the attended speech stream from the whole auditory scene and how increasing background noise corrupts this process is still debated. In this magnetoencephalography study, subjects had to attend a speech stream with or without multitalker background noise. Results argue for frequency-dependent cortical tracking mechanisms for the attended speech stream. The left superior temporal gyrus tracked the ∼0.5 Hz modulations of the attended speech stream only when the speech was embedded in multitalker background, whereas the right supratemporal auditory cortex tracked 4-8 Hz modulations during both noiseless and cocktail-party conditions.
Keyphrases
  • hearing loss
  • working memory
  • functional connectivity
  • air pollution
  • resting state
  • subarachnoid hemorrhage