Age-Related Differences in Auditory Cortex Activity During Spoken Word Recognition.

IF 3.6 Q1 LINGUISTICS
Neurobiology of Language Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-10-01 DOI:10.1162/nol_a_00021
Chad S Rogers, Michael S Jones, Sarah McConkey, Brent Spehar, Kristin J Van Engen, Mitchell S Sommers, Jonathan E Peelle
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Abstract

Understanding spoken words requires the rapid matching of a complex acoustic stimulus with stored lexical representations. The degree to which brain networks supporting spoken word recognition are affected by adult aging remains poorly understood. In the current study we used fMRI to measure the brain responses to spoken words in two conditions: an attentive listening condition, in which no response was required, and a repetition task. Listeners were 29 young adults (aged 19-30 years) and 32 older adults (aged 65-81 years) without self-reported hearing difficulty. We found largely similar patterns of activity during word perception for both young and older adults, centered on the bilateral superior temporal gyrus. As expected, the repetition condition resulted in significantly more activity in areas related to motor planning and execution (including the premotor cortex and supplemental motor area) compared to the attentive listening condition. Importantly, however, older adults showed significantly less activity in probabilistically defined auditory cortex than young adults when listening to individual words in both the attentive listening and repetition tasks. Age differences in auditory cortex activity were seen selectively for words (no age differences were present for 1-channel vocoded speech, used as a control condition), and could not be easily explained by accuracy on the task, movement in the scanner, or hearing sensitivity (available on a subset of participants). These findings indicate largely similar patterns of brain activity for young and older adults when listening to words in quiet, but suggest less recruitment of auditory cortex by the older adults.

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语音识别过程中听觉皮层活动的年龄相关差异。
理解口语需要将复杂的声音刺激与存储的词汇表征快速匹配。支持口语识别的大脑网络在多大程度上受到成年人年龄增长的影响,人们仍然知之甚少。在目前的研究中,我们使用功能磁共振成像来测量大脑在两种情况下对口语的反应:一种是专心倾听,不需要反应,另一种是重复任务。听者为29名年轻人(19-30岁)和32名老年人(65-81岁),没有自我报告的听力困难。我们发现,年轻人和老年人在单词感知过程中的活动模式大体相似,都集中在双侧颞上回。正如预期的那样,与专心聆听条件相比,重复条件导致运动计划和执行相关区域(包括运动前皮层和补充运动区域)的活动明显增加。然而,重要的是,在专心听力和重复任务中,老年人在概率定义的听觉皮层上的活动明显少于年轻人。听觉皮层活动的年龄差异被选择性地观察到(作为控制条件的单通道语音编码语言没有年龄差异),并且不能轻易地用任务的准确性、扫描仪中的运动或听力灵敏度(在一部分参与者中可用)来解释。这些发现表明,在安静地听单词时,年轻人和老年人的大脑活动模式大致相似,但老年人的听觉皮层的活动较少。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Neurobiology of Language
Neurobiology of Language Social Sciences-Linguistics and Language
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
6.20%
发文量
32
审稿时长
17 weeks
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