1. Movement-related cortical potential and speech-induced suppression during speech production in younger and older adults.
- Author
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Tremblay, Pascale and Sato, Marc
- Subjects
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YOUNG adults , *OLDER people , *SPEECH , *AUDITORY evoked response - Abstract
• The causes of age-related speech production difficulties are unknown. • We used EEG to examine speech motor control mechanisms in aging. • Pre-speech movement-related cortical potential (MRCP) is reduced in older adults. • Speaking-induced suppression is preserved. • Speech motor planning is affected by aging. With age, the speech system undergoes important changes that render speech production more laborious, slower and often less intelligible. And yet, the neural mechanisms that underlie these age-related changes remain unclear. In this EEG study, we examined two important mechanisms in speech motor control: pre-speech movement-related cortical potential (MRCP), which reflects speech motor planning, and speaking-induced suppression (SIS), which indexes auditory predictions of speech motor commands, in 20 healthy young and 20 healthy older adults. Participants undertook a vowel production task which was followed by passive listening of their own recorded vowels. Our results revealed extensive differences in MRCP in older compared to younger adults. Further, while longer latencies were observed in older adults on N1 and P2, in contrast, the SIS was preserved. The observed reduced MRCP appears as a potential explanatory mechanism for the known age-related slowing of speech production, while preserved SIS suggests intact motor-to-auditory integration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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