Neural oscillations reflect the individual differences in the temporal perception of audiovisual speech

Author:

Jiang Zeliang1ORCID,An Xingwei1,Liu Shuang1,Yin Erwei123,Yan Ye123,Ming Dong1

Affiliation:

1. Academy of Medical Engineering and Translational Medicine, Tianjin University , 300072 Tianjin, China

2. Defense Innovation Institute, Academy of Military Sciences (AMS) , 100071 Beijing, China

3. Tianjin Artificial Intelligence Innovation Center (TAIIC) , 300457 Tianjin, China

Abstract

Abstract Multisensory integration occurs within a limited time interval between multimodal stimuli. Multisensory temporal perception varies widely among individuals and involves perceptual synchrony and temporal sensitivity processes. Previous studies explored the neural mechanisms of individual differences for beep-flash stimuli, whereas there was no study for speech. In this study, 28 subjects (16 male) performed an audiovisual speech/ba/simultaneity judgment task while recording their electroencephalography. We examined the relationship between prestimulus neural oscillations (i.e. the pre-pronunciation movement-related oscillations) and temporal perception. The perceptual synchrony was quantified using the Point of Subjective Simultaneity and temporal sensitivity using the Temporal Binding Window. Our results revealed dissociated neural mechanisms for individual differences in Temporal Binding Window and Point of Subjective Simultaneity. The frontocentral delta power, reflecting top-down attention control, is positively related to the magnitude of individual auditory leading Temporal Binding Windows (auditory Temporal Binding Windows; LTBWs), whereas the parieto-occipital theta power, indexing bottom-up visual temporal attention specific to speech, is negatively associated with the magnitude of individual visual leading Temporal Binding Windows (visual Temporal Binding Windows; RTBWs). In addition, increased left frontal and bilateral temporoparietal occipital alpha power, reflecting general attentional states, is associated with increased Points of Subjective Simultaneity. Strengthening attention abilities might improve the audiovisual temporal perception of speech and further impact speech integration.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Key Program of Natural Science Foundation of Tianjin

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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