Speaker-induced Suppression in EEG during a Naturalistic Reading and Listening Task

Author:

Kurteff Garret L.1ORCID,Lester-Smith Rosemary A.1ORCID,Martinez Amanda1,Currens Nicole1,Holder Jade1,Villarreal Cassandra1,Mercado Valerie R.1,Truong Christopher1,Huber Claire1,Pokharel Paranjaya1,Hamilton Liberty S.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Texas at Austin

Abstract

Abstract Speaking elicits a suppressed neural response when compared with listening to others' speech, a phenomenon known as speaker-induced suppression (SIS). Previous research has focused on investigating SIS at constrained levels of linguistic representation, such as the individual phoneme and word level. Here, we present scalp EEG data from a dual speech perception and production task where participants read sentences aloud then listened to playback of themselves reading those sentences. Playback was separated into immediate repetition of the previous trial and randomized repetition of a former trial to investigate if forward modeling of responses during passive listening suppresses the neural response. Concurrent EMG was recorded to control for movement artifact during speech production. In line with previous research, ERP analyses at the sentence level demonstrated suppression of early auditory components of the EEG for production compared with perception. To evaluate whether linguistic abstractions (in the form of phonological feature tuning) are suppressed during speech production alongside lower-level acoustic information, we fit linear encoding models that predicted scalp EEG based on phonological features, EMG activity, and task condition. We found that phonological features were encoded similarly between production and perception. However, this similarity was only observed when controlling for movement by using the EMG response as an additional regressor. Our results suggest that SIS operates at a sensory representational level and is dissociated from higher order cognitive and linguistic processing that takes place during speech perception and production. We also detail some important considerations when analyzing EEG during continuous speech production.

Funder

The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Speech, Language, and Hearing Science

The University of Texas at Austin, Department of Neurology

Publisher

MIT Press

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience

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