自闭症在噪音中言语的听觉和语义加工:一项行为和脑电图研究。

IF 5.6
Jiayin Li, Maleeha Sujawal, Zivile Bernotaite, Ian Cunnings, Fang Liu
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引用次数: 0

摘要

自闭症患者常常难以在嘈杂的环境中识别语音,但这些挑战背后的神经机制尚不清楚。有效的噪声中语音处理依赖于听觉处理和语义处理,听觉处理在噪声中跟踪目标声音,语义处理进一步整合相关的声学信息来推导意义。这项研究考察了自闭症患者的这两个过程。31名自闭症成年人和31名非自闭症成年人在安静、咿呀学语和竞争性言语三种条件下完成了一项句子判断任务。听觉处理使用脑电图衍生的时间反应函数(TRFs)进行测量,该函数追踪大脑如何跟随语音,而语义处理通过行为准确性和N400成分(语义处理的神经标志物)进行评估。自闭症参与者表现出较低的TRF反应和延迟的N400发作,表明听觉加工效率较低,语义加工较慢,尽管N400振幅和行为表现相似。此外,非自闭症参与者表现出听觉和语义加工资源之间的权衡。在竞争语音条件下,当处理可理解语音噪声引入的语言竞争时,他们表现出增强的语义整合,但减少了听觉信息的神经跟踪。相比之下,自闭症组没有表现出神经反应的调节,这表明他们在调整听觉和语义需求方面的灵活性降低了。这些发现突出了自闭症个体在SiN任务中不同的神经处理模式,为非典型听觉和语义处理如何影响自闭症患者的SiN感知提供了新的见解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Auditory and Semantic Processing of Speech-in-Noise in Autism: A Behavioral and EEG Study.

Autistic individuals often struggle to recognize speech in noisy environments, but the neural mechanisms behind these challenges remain unclear. Effective speech-in-noise (SiN) processing relies on auditory processing, which tracks target sounds amidst noise, and semantic processing, which further integrates relevant acoustic information to derive meaning. This study examined these two processes in autism. Thirty-one autistic and 31 non-autistic adults completed a sentence judgment task under three conditions: quiet, babble noise, and competing speech. Auditory processing was measured using EEG-derived temporal response functions (TRFs), which tracked how the brain follows speech sounds, while semantic processing was assessed via behavioral accuracy and the N400 component, a neural marker of semantic processing. Autistic participants showed reduced TRF responses and delayed N400 onset, indicating less efficient auditory processing and slower semantic processing, despite similar N400 amplitude and behavioral performance. Moreover, non-autistic participants demonstrated a trade-off between auditory and semantic processing resources. In the competing speech condition, they showed enhanced semantic integration but reduced neural tracking of auditory information when managing linguistic competition introduced by intelligible speech noise. In contrast, the autistic group showed no modulation of neural responses, suggesting reduced flexibility in adjusting auditory and semantic demands. These findings highlight distinct neural processing patterns in autistic individuals during SiN tasks, providing new insights into how atypical auditory and semantic processing shape SiN perception in autism.

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