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Processing of an Audiobook in the Human Brain Is Shaped by Cultural Family Background

Authors :
Hakonen, Maria
Ikäheimonen, Arsi
Hulten, Annika
Kauttonen, Janne
Koskinen, Miika
Lin, Fa-Hsuan
Lowe, Anastasia
Sams, Mikko
Jääskeläinen, Iiro P.
Department of Neuroscience and Biomedical Engineering
Haaga-Helia University of Applied Sciences
University of Helsinki
University of Toronto
Aalto-yliopisto
Aalto University
HUS Medical Imaging Center
HUSLAB
Medicum
Faculty of Medicine
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2022.

Abstract

Funding Information: Funding: This work was supported by the Academy of Finland [257811, 273469, 276643, 287474, 332309]; Jane and Aatos Erkko Foundation; Emil Aaltonen Foundation; Paulo Foundation and Russian Science Foundation grant [No: 22-48-08002]. Publisher Copyright: © 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Perception of the same narrative can vary between individuals depending on a listener’s previous experiences. We studied whether and how cultural family background may shape the processing of an audiobook in the human brain. During functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), 48 healthy volunteers from two different cultural family backgrounds listened to an audiobook depicting the intercultural social life of young adults with the respective cultural backgrounds. Shared cultural family background increased inter-subject correlation of hemodynamic activity in the left-hemispheric Heschl’s gyrus, insula, superior temporal gyrus, lingual gyrus and middle temporal gyrus, in the right-hemispheric lateral occipital and posterior cingulate cortices as well as in the bilateral middle temporal gyrus, middle occipital gyrus and precuneus. Thus, cultural family background is reflected in multiple areas of speech processing in the brain and may also modulate visual imagery. After neuroimaging, the participants listenedto the narrative again and, after each passage, produced a list of words that had been on their minds when they heard the audiobook during neuroimaging. Cultural family background was reflected as semantic differences in these word lists as quantified by a word2vec-generated semantic model. Our findings may depict enhanced mutual understanding between persons who share similar cultural family backgrounds.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..422ef30933a9acad43f5ed926c71dd62