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Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music

OBJECTIVES: Auditory steady-state responses that can be elicited by various periodic sounds inform about subcortical and early cortical auditory processing. Steady-state responses to amplitude-modulated pure tones have been used to scrutinize binaural interaction by frequency-tagging the two ears’ i...

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Autores principales: Lamminmäki, Satu, Parkkonen, Lauri, Hari, Riitta
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Williams And Wilkins 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4072443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24603544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000000033
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author Lamminmäki, Satu
Parkkonen, Lauri
Hari, Riitta
author_facet Lamminmäki, Satu
Parkkonen, Lauri
Hari, Riitta
author_sort Lamminmäki, Satu
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVES: Auditory steady-state responses that can be elicited by various periodic sounds inform about subcortical and early cortical auditory processing. Steady-state responses to amplitude-modulated pure tones have been used to scrutinize binaural interaction by frequency-tagging the two ears’ inputs at different frequencies. Unlike pure tones, speech and music are physically very complex, as they include many frequency components, pauses, and large temporal variations. To examine the utility of magnetoencephalographic (MEG) steady-state fields (SSFs) in the study of early cortical processing of complex natural sounds, the authors tested the extent to which amplitude-modulated speech and music can elicit reliable SSFs. DESIGN: MEG responses were recorded to 90-s-long binaural tones, speech, and music, amplitude-modulated at 41.1 Hz at four different depths (25, 50, 75, and 100%). The subjects were 11 healthy, normal-hearing adults. MEG signals were averaged in phase with the modulation frequency, and the sources of the resulting SSFs were modeled by current dipoles. After the MEG recording, intelligibility of the speech, musical quality of the music stimuli, naturalness of music and speech stimuli, and the perceived deterioration caused by the modulation were evaluated on visual analog scales. RESULTS: The perceived quality of the stimuli decreased as a function of increasing modulation depth, more strongly for music than speech; yet, all subjects considered the speech intelligible even at the 100% modulation. SSFs were the strongest to tones and the weakest to speech stimuli; the amplitudes increased with increasing modulation depth for all stimuli. SSFs to tones were reliably detectable at all modulation depths (in all subjects in the right hemisphere, in 9 subjects in the left hemisphere) and to music stimuli at 50 to 100% depths, whereas speech usually elicited clear SSFs only at 100% depth. The hemispheric balance of SSFs was toward the right hemisphere for tones and speech, whereas SSFs to music showed no lateralization. In addition, the right lateralization of SSFs to the speech stimuli decreased with decreasing modulation depth. CONCLUSIONS: The results showed that SSFs can be reliably measured to amplitude-modulated natural sounds, with slightly different hemispheric lateralization for different carrier sounds. With speech stimuli, modulation at 100% depth is required, whereas for music the 75% or even 50% modulation depths provide a reasonable compromise between the signal-to-noise ratio of SSFs and sound quality or perceptual requirements. SSF recordings thus seem feasible for assessing the early cortical processing of natural sounds.
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spelling pubmed-40724432014-06-27 Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music Lamminmäki, Satu Parkkonen, Lauri Hari, Riitta Ear Hear Research Articles OBJECTIVES: Auditory steady-state responses that can be elicited by various periodic sounds inform about subcortical and early cortical auditory processing. Steady-state responses to amplitude-modulated pure tones have been used to scrutinize binaural interaction by frequency-tagging the two ears’ inputs at different frequencies. Unlike pure tones, speech and music are physically very complex, as they include many frequency components, pauses, and large temporal variations. To examine the utility of magnetoencephalographic (MEG) steady-state fields (SSFs) in the study of early cortical processing of complex natural sounds, the authors tested the extent to which amplitude-modulated speech and music can elicit reliable SSFs. DESIGN: MEG responses were recorded to 90-s-long binaural tones, speech, and music, amplitude-modulated at 41.1 Hz at four different depths (25, 50, 75, and 100%). The subjects were 11 healthy, normal-hearing adults. MEG signals were averaged in phase with the modulation frequency, and the sources of the resulting SSFs were modeled by current dipoles. After the MEG recording, intelligibility of the speech, musical quality of the music stimuli, naturalness of music and speech stimuli, and the perceived deterioration caused by the modulation were evaluated on visual analog scales. RESULTS: The perceived quality of the stimuli decreased as a function of increasing modulation depth, more strongly for music than speech; yet, all subjects considered the speech intelligible even at the 100% modulation. SSFs were the strongest to tones and the weakest to speech stimuli; the amplitudes increased with increasing modulation depth for all stimuli. SSFs to tones were reliably detectable at all modulation depths (in all subjects in the right hemisphere, in 9 subjects in the left hemisphere) and to music stimuli at 50 to 100% depths, whereas speech usually elicited clear SSFs only at 100% depth. The hemispheric balance of SSFs was toward the right hemisphere for tones and speech, whereas SSFs to music showed no lateralization. In addition, the right lateralization of SSFs to the speech stimuli decreased with decreasing modulation depth. CONCLUSIONS: The results showed that SSFs can be reliably measured to amplitude-modulated natural sounds, with slightly different hemispheric lateralization for different carrier sounds. With speech stimuli, modulation at 100% depth is required, whereas for music the 75% or even 50% modulation depths provide a reasonable compromise between the signal-to-noise ratio of SSFs and sound quality or perceptual requirements. SSF recordings thus seem feasible for assessing the early cortical processing of natural sounds. Williams And Wilkins 2014-07 2014-06-23 /pmc/articles/PMC4072443/ /pubmed/24603544 http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000000033 Text en Copyright © 2014 by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivitives 3.0 License, where it is permissible to download and share the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Lamminmäki, Satu
Parkkonen, Lauri
Hari, Riitta
Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title_full Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title_fullStr Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title_full_unstemmed Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title_short Human Neuromagnetic Steady-State Responses to Amplitude-Modulated Tones, Speech, and Music
title_sort human neuromagnetic steady-state responses to amplitude-modulated tones, speech, and music
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4072443/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24603544
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/AUD.0000000000000033
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