Human inferior colliculus activity relates to individual differences in spoken language learning

Author:

Chandrasekaran Bharath1,Kraus Nina2,Wong Patrick C. M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Center for Perceptual Systems, Institute for Neuroscience, The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas;

2. The Roxelyn and Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Department of Neurobiology and Physiology, Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, and The Hugh Knowles Hearing Center, Northwestern University, Evanston; and

3. The Roxelyn and Richard Pepper Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Department of Otolaryngology—Head and Neck Surgery, and The Hugh Knowles Hearing Center, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois

Abstract

A challenge to learning words of a foreign language is encoding nonnative phonemes, a process typically attributed to cortical circuitry. Using multimodal imaging methods [functional magnetic resonance imaging-adaptation (fMRI-A) and auditory brain stem responses (ABR)], we examined the extent to which pretraining pitch encoding in the inferior colliculus (IC), a primary midbrain structure, related to individual variability in learning to successfully use nonnative pitch patterns to distinguish words in American English-speaking adults. fMRI-A indexed the efficiency of pitch representation localized to the IC, whereas ABR quantified midbrain pitch-related activity with millisecond precision. In line with neural “sharpening” models, we found that efficient IC pitch pattern representation (indexed by fMRI) related to superior neural representation of pitch patterns (indexed by ABR), and consequently more successful word learning following sound-to-meaning training. Our results establish a critical role for the IC in speech-sound representation, consistent with the established role for the IC in the representation of communication signals in other animal models.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology,General Neuroscience

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