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Laminar cortical dynamics of conscious speech perception: Neural model of phonemic restoration using subsequent context in noise

Authors :
Stephen Grossberg
Sohrob Kazerounian
Source :
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America. 130:440-460
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Acoustical Society of America (ASA), 2011.

Abstract

How are laminar circuits of neocortex organized to generate conscious speech and language percepts? How does the brain restore information that is occluded by noise, or absent from an acoustic signal, by integrating contextual information over many milliseconds to disambiguate noise-occluded acoustical signals? How are speech and language heard in the correct temporal order, despite the influence of contexts that may occur many milliseconds before or after each perceived word? A neural model describes key mechanisms in forming conscious speech percepts, and quantitatively simulates a critical example of contextual disambiguation of speech and language; namely, phonemic restoration. Here, a phoneme deleted from a speech stream is perceptually restored when it is replaced by broadband noise, even when the disambiguating context occurs after the phoneme was presented. The model describes how the laminar circuits within a hierarchy of cortical processing stages may interact to generate a conscious speech percept that is embodied by a resonant wave of activation that occurs between acoustic features, acoustic item chunks, and list chunks. Chunk-mediated gating allows speech to be heard in the correct temporal order, even when what is heard depends upon future context.

Details

ISSN :
00014966
Volume :
130
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....834f404505ce3bbd7e1ecb36f77e90a1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1121/1.3589258