Back to Search Start Over

Temporal coding in the auditory cortex

Authors :
Luc H. Arnal
Anne-Lise Giraud
David Poeppel
Source :
The Human Auditory System Fundamental Organization and Clinical Disorders
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
Elsevier, 2015.

Abstract

Speech is a complex acoustic signal showing a quasiperiodic structure at several timescales. Integrated neural signals recorded in the cortex also show periodicity at different timescales. In this chapter we outline the neural mechanisms that potentially allow the auditory cortex to segment and encode continuous speech. This chapter focuses on how the human auditory cortex uses the temporal structure of the acoustic signal to extract phonemes and syllables, the two major constituents of connected speech. We argue that the quasiperiodic structure of collective neural activity in auditory cortex represents the ideal mechanical infrastructure to fractionate continuous speech into linguistic constituents of variable sizes.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Human Auditory System Fundamental Organization and Clinical Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........70d02a8c5099c04041ac98768ea930b0