PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

UCSF team reveals how the brain recognizes speech sounds

Shaping of sound by our mouths leaves an acoustic trail the brain can follow, say researchers

2014-01-31
(Press-News.org) Contact information: Peter Farley
peter.farley@ucsf.edu
415-502-6397
University of California - San Francisco
UCSF team reveals how the brain recognizes speech sounds Shaping of sound by our mouths leaves an acoustic trail the brain can follow, say researchers

UC San Francisco researchers are reporting a detailed account of how speech sounds are identified by the human brain, offering an unprecedented insight into the basis of human language. The finding, they said, may add to our understanding of language disorders, including dyslexia.

Scientists have known for some time the location in the brain where speech sounds are interpreted, but little has been discovered about how this process works.

Now, in Science Express (January 30th, 2014), the fast-tracked online version of the journal Science, the UCSF team reports that the brain does not respond to the individual sound segments known as phonemes—such as the b sound in "boy"—but is instead exquisitely tuned to detect simpler elements, which are known to linguists as "features."

This organization may give listeners an important advantage in interpreting speech, the researchers said, since the articulation of phonemes varies considerably across speakers, and even in individual speakers over time.

The work may add to our understanding of reading disorders, in which printed words are imperfectly mapped onto speech sounds. But because speech and language are a defining human behavior, the findings are significant in their own right, said UCSF neurosurgeon and neuroscientist Edward F. Chang, MD, senior author of the new study.

"This is a very intriguing glimpse into speech processing," said Chang, associate professor of neurological surgery and physiology. "The brain regions where speech is processed in the brain had been identified, but no one has really known how that processing happens."

Although we usually find it effortless to understand other people when they speak, parsing the speech stream is an impressive perceptual feat. Speech is a highly complex and variable acoustic signal, and our ability to instantaneously break that signal down into individual phonemes and then build those segments back up into words, sentences and meaning is a remarkable capability.

Because of this complexity, previous studies have analyzed brain responses to just a few natural or synthesized speech sounds, but the new research employed spoken natural sentences containing the complete inventory of phonemes in the English language.

To capture the very rapid brain changes involved in processing speech, the UCSF scientists gathered their data from neural recording devices that were placed directly on the surface of the brains of six patients as part of their epilepsy surgery.

The patients listened to a collection of 500 unique English sentences spoken by 400 different people while the researchers recorded from a brain area called the superior temporal gyrus (STG; also known as Wernicke's area), which previous research has shown to be involved in speech perception. The utterances contained multiple instances of every English speech sound.

Many researchers have presumed that brain cells in the STG would respond to phonemes. But the researchers found instead that regions of the STG are tuned to respond to even more elemental acoustic features that reference the particular way that speech sounds are generated from the vocal tract. "These regions are spread out over the STG," said first author Nima Mesgarani, PhD, now an assistant professor of electrical engineering at Columbia University, who did the research as a postdoctoral fellow in Chang's laboratory. "As a result, when we hear someone talk, different areas in the brain 'light up' as we hear the stream of different speech elements."

"Features," as linguists use the term, are distinctive acoustic signatures created when speakers move the lips, tongue or vocal cords. For example, consonants such as p, t, k, b and d require speakers to use the lips or tongue to obstruct air flowing from the lungs. When this occlusion is released, there is a brief burst of air, which has led linguists to categorize these sounds as "plosives." Others, such as s, z and v, are grouped together as "fricatives," because they only partially obstruct the airway, creating friction in the vocal tract.

The articulation of each plosive creates an acoustic pattern common to the entire class of these consonants, as does the turbulence created by fricatives. The Chang group found that particular regions of the STG are precisely tuned to robustly respond to these broad, shared features rather than to individual phonemes like b or z.

Chang said the arrangement the team discovered in the STG is reminiscent of feature detectors in the visual system for edges and shapes, which allow us to recognize objects, like bottles, no matter which perspective we view them from. Given the variability of speech across speakers and situations, it makes sense, said co-author Keith Johnson, PhD, professor of linguistics at the University of California, Berkeley, for the brain to employ this sort of feature-based algorithm to reliably identify phonemes.

"It's the conjunctions of responses in combination that give you the higher idea of a phoneme as a complete object," Chang said. "By studying all of the speech sounds in English, we found that the brain has a systematic organization for basic sound feature units, kind of like elements in the periodic table."



INFORMATION:

The research team also included Connie Cheung, a UCSF graduate student in bioengineering.

The work was funded by grants to Chang from the National Institutes of Health and the Ester A. and Joseph Klingenstein Fund.

UCSF is a leading university dedicated to promoting health worldwide through advanced biomedical research, graduate-level education in the life sciences and health professions, and excellence in patient care. It includes top-ranked graduate schools of dentistry, medicine, nursing and pharmacy, a graduate division with nationally renowned programs in basic biomedical, translational and population sciences, as well as a preeminent biomedical research enterprise and two top-ranked hospitals, UCSF Medical Center and UCSF Benioff Children's Hospital.



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

NSA pursues quantum technology

2014-01-31
In this month's issue of Physics World, Jon Cartwright explains how the revelation that the US National Security Agency (NSA) is developing quantum computers has renewed interest and sparked debate on just how far ahead they are ...

Discovery may lead to new drugs for osteoporosis

2014-01-31
Scientists at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis have discovered what appears to be a potent stimulator of new bone growth. The finding could lead to new treatments for osteoporosis ...

Trick that aids viral infection is identified

2014-01-31
Scientists have identified a way some viruses protect themselves from the immune system's efforts to stop infections, a finding that may make new approaches to treating viral infections possible. Viruses ...

Antipsychotic prescription for children and adolescents

2014-01-31
Increasing numbers of children and adolescents are being given antipsychotic drugs in Germany, as Christian Bachmann and colleagues found out in a study published in the current ...

Nearly everyone uses piezoelectrics -- Be nice to know how they work

2014-01-31
Piezoelectrics—materials that can change mechanical stress to electricity and back again—are everywhere in modern life. Computer hard drives. Loud speakers. Medical ultrasound. ...

Flying the not-so-friendly skies

2014-01-31
CAMBRIDGE, MA -- Consider the last time you dealt with an airline service mishap: a bag lost in transit, a flight delayed or canceled, or an overbooked plane. Are you more or less likely to make a formal complaint about ...

Real-time video could improve effect of core stabilization exercise in stroke patients

2014-01-31
Amsterdam, NL, January 30, 2014 – About 80% of stroke survivors experience hemiparesis, which causes weakness or the ...

Worry on the brain

2014-01-31
According to the National Institute of Mental Health, over 18 percent of American adults suffer from anxiety disorders, characterized as excessive ...

New study examines the effects of catch-and-release fishing on sharks

2014-01-31
MIAMI – (Jan. 29, 2014) ...

NASA satellite sees System 91S undeveloped in Mozambique Channel

2014-01-31
The Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission or TRMM satellite that observed the tropical low pressure area designated as System 91S earlier this week captured another look at a much weaker storm on January ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Chonnam National University researchers propose innovative voltage-loop control for power factor correction

Accelerating next-generation drug discovery with click-based construction of PROTACs

Detecting the hidden magnetism of altermagnets

$7M gift supports health research, engineering and athletics at UT San Antonio

NU-9 halts Alzheimer’s disease in animal model before symptoms begin

Hospitals acquired by real estate investment trusts associated with greater risk of bankruptcy, closure

City of Hope scientists study rare disorder to uncover mechanism and hormone regulation underlying fatty liver disease and sweet aversion

Your genes may influence gut microbiome of others, rat study shows

‘Personality test’ shows how AI chatbots mimic human traits – and how they can be manipulated

Global food systems driving twin crises of obesity and global heating

Osaka Medical and Pharmaceutical University researchers capture real-time molecular movies of enzyme catalysis

Could your genes influence the gut microbiome of others?

Clues to Alzheimer’s disease may be hiding in our ‘junk’ DNA

Study reveals that the body uses different sensors to detect cold in the skin and in internal organs

iPS cells from dish to freezer and back

Deep neural networks enable accurate pricing of American options under stochastic volatility

Collective risk resonance in Chinese stock sectors uncovered through higher-order network analysis

Does CPU impact systemic risk contributions of Chinese sectors? Evidence from mixed frequency methods with asymmetric tail long memory

General intelligence framework to predict virus adaptation based on a genome language model

Antibiotic resistance is ancient, ecological, and deeply connected to human activity, new review shows

Vapes, pouches, heated tobacco, shisha, cigarettes: nicotine in all forms is toxic to the heart and blood vessels

From powder to planet: University of Modena engineers forge a low-carbon future for advanced metal manufacturing

Super strain-resistant superconductors

Pre-school health programme does not improve children’s diet or physical activity, prompting call for policy changes, study finds

Autumn clock change linked to reduction in certain health conditions

AI images of doctors can exaggerate and reinforce existing stereotypes

Where medicine meets melody – how lullabies help babies and parents in intensive care

We may never be able to tell if AI becomes conscious, argues philosopher

AI video translation shows promise but humans still hold the edge

Deep ocean earthquakes drive Southern Ocean’s massive phytoplankton blooms, study finds

[Press-News.org] UCSF team reveals how the brain recognizes speech sounds
Shaping of sound by our mouths leaves an acoustic trail the brain can follow, say researchers