EEG-based speaker–listener neural coupling reflects speech-selective attentional mechanisms beyond the speech stimulus

Author:

Li Jiawei123ORCID,Hong Bo24ORCID,Nolte Guido5ORCID,Engel Andreas K5ORCID,Zhang Dan12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Tsinghua University Department of Psychology, School of Social Sciences, , Beijing 100084 , China

2. Tsinghua University Tsinghua Laboratory of Brain and Intelligence, , Beijing 100084 , China

3. Freie Universität Berlin, Habelschwerdter Allee Department of Education and Psychology, , Berlin 14195 , Germany

4. School of Medicine, Tsinghua University Department of Biomedical Engineering, , Beijing 100084 , China

5. University Medical Center Hamburg Eppendorf Department of Neurophysiology and Pathophysiology, , Hamburg 20246 , Germany

Abstract

Abstract When we pay attention to someone, do we focus only on the sound they make, the word they use, or do we form a mental space shared with the speaker we want to pay attention to? Some would argue that the human language is no other than a simple signal, but others claim that human beings understand each other because they form a shared mental ground between the speaker and the listener. Our study aimed to explore the neural mechanisms of speech-selective attention by investigating the electroencephalogram-based neural coupling between the speaker and the listener in a cocktail party paradigm. The temporal response function method was employed to reveal how the listener was coupled to the speaker at the neural level. The results showed that the neural coupling between the listener and the attended speaker peaked 5 s before speech onset at the delta band over the left frontal region, and was correlated with speech comprehension performance. In contrast, the attentional processing of speech acoustics and semantics occurred primarily at a later stage after speech onset and was not significantly correlated with comprehension performance. These findings suggest a predictive mechanism to achieve speaker–listener neural coupling for successful speech comprehension.

Funder

Humboldt Foundation

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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