Age differentially modulates the cortical tracking of the lower and higher level linguistic structures during speech comprehension

Author:

Xu Na123,Qin Xiaoxiao123,Zhou Ziqi123,Shan Wei123,Ren Jiechuan123,Yang Chunqing123,Lu Lingxi4,Wang Qun12356

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology , Beijing Tiantan Hospital, , Beijing 100070 , China

2. Capital Medical University , Beijing Tiantan Hospital, , Beijing 100070 , China

3. National Clinical Research Center for Neurological Diseases , Beijing 100070 , China

4. Center for the Cognitive Science of Language, Beijing Language and Culture University , Beijing 100083 , China

5. Beijing Institute of Brain Disorders , Collaborative Innovation Center for Brain Disorders, , Beijing 100069 , China

6. Capital Medical University , Collaborative Innovation Center for Brain Disorders, , Beijing 100069 , China

Abstract

Abstract Speech comprehension requires listeners to rapidly parse continuous speech into hierarchically-organized linguistic structures (i.e. syllable, word, phrase, and sentence) and entrain the neural activities to the rhythm of different linguistic levels. Aging is accompanied by changes in speech processing, but it remains unclear how aging affects different levels of linguistic representation. Here, we recorded magnetoencephalography signals in older and younger groups when subjects actively and passively listened to the continuous speech in which hierarchical linguistic structures of word, phrase, and sentence were tagged at 4, 2, and 1 Hz, respectively. A newly-developed parameterization algorithm was applied to separate the periodically linguistic tracking from the aperiodic component. We found enhanced lower-level (word-level) tracking, reduced higher-level (phrasal- and sentential-level) tracking, and reduced aperiodic offset in older compared with younger adults. Furthermore, we observed the attentional modulation on the sentential-level tracking being larger for younger than for older ones. Notably, the neuro-behavior analyses showed that subjects’ behavioral accuracy was positively correlated with the higher-level linguistic tracking, reversely correlated with the lower-level linguistic tracking. Overall, these results suggest that the enhanced lower-level linguistic tracking, reduced higher-level linguistic tracking and less flexibility of attentional modulation may underpin aging-related decline in speech comprehension.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Beijing Nova Program

Capital Health Research and Development of Special

Beijing Natural Science Foundation

International ChineseLanguage Education Research Program of the Center for Language Education and Cooperation

Science Foundation of Beijing Language and Culture University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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