Testing native language neural commitment at the brainstem level: A cross-linguistic investigation of the association between frequency-following response and speech perception

Luodi Yu, Yang Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

A current topic in auditory neurophysiology is how brainstem sensory coding contributes to higher-level perceptual, linguistic and cognitive skills. This cross-language study was designed to compare frequency following responses (FFRs) for lexical tones in tonal (Mandarin Chinese) and non-tonal (English) language users and test the correlational strength between FFRs and behavior as a function of language experience. The behavioral measures were obtained in the Garner paradigm to assess how lexical tones might interfere with vowel category and duration judgement. The FFR results replicated previous findings about between-group differences, showing enhanced pitch tracking responses in the Chinese subjects. The behavioral data from the two subject groups showed that lexical tone variation in the vowel stimuli significantly interfered with vowel identification with a greater effect in the Chinese group. Moreover, the FFRs for lexical tone contours were significantly correlated with the behavioral interference only in the Chinese group. This pattern of language-specific association between speech perception and brainstem-level neural phase-locking of linguistic pitch information provides evidence for a possible native language neural commitment at the subcortical level, highlighting the role of experience-dependent brainstem tuning in influencing subsequent linguistic processing in the adult brain.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)140-148
Number of pages9
JournalNeuropsychologia
Volume109
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 31 2018

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This work was funded in part by the Graduate Research Partnership Program Fellowship (LY), the Grand Challenges Exploratory Research Grant (YZ) and Brain Imaging Research Project Award (YZ) at the University of Minnesota, and a grant from the Natural Science Foundation of China (YZ, NSFC 31728009). We thank Drs. Dorea Ruggles and Andrew Byrne at the Multisensory Perception Laboratory for their assistance in EEG data collection.

Funding Information:
This work was funded in part by the Graduate Research Partnership Program Fellowship (LY), the Grand Challenges Exploratory Research Grant (YZ) and Brain Imaging Research Project Award (YZ) at the University of Minnesota, and a grant from the Natural Science Foundation of China ( YZ, NSFC 31728009 ). We thank Drs. Dorea Ruggles and Andrew Byrne at the Multisensory Perception Laboratory for their assistance in EEG data collection.

Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Elsevier Ltd

Keywords

  • Frequency following response
  • Garner paradigm
  • Lexical tones
  • Native language neural commitment Theory
  • Speech perception

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