Exploring neural tracking of acoustic and linguistic speech representations in individuals with post‐stroke aphasia

Author:

Kries Jill12,De Clercq Pieter1,Gillis Marlies1,Vanthornhout Jonas1,Lemmens Robin345,Francart Tom1,Vandermosten Maaike1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Experimental Oto‐Rhino‐Laryngology, Department of Neurosciences, Leuven Brain Institute KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

2. Department of Psychology Stanford University Stanford California USA

3. Experimental Neurology, Department of Neurosciences KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

4. Laboratory of Neurobiology, VIB‐KU Leuven Center for Brain and Disease Research Leuven Belgium

5. Department of Neurology University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

Abstract

AbstractAphasia is a communication disorder that affects processing of language at different levels (e.g., acoustic, phonological, semantic). Recording brain activity via Electroencephalography while people listen to a continuous story allows to analyze brain responses to acoustic and linguistic properties of speech. When the neural activity aligns with these speech properties, it is referred to as neural tracking. Even though measuring neural tracking of speech may present an interesting approach to studying aphasia in an ecologically valid way, it has not yet been investigated in individuals with stroke‐induced aphasia. Here, we explored processing of acoustic and linguistic speech representations in individuals with aphasia in the chronic phase after stroke and age‐matched healthy controls. We found decreased neural tracking of acoustic speech representations (envelope and envelope onsets) in individuals with aphasia. In addition, word surprisal displayed decreased amplitudes in individuals with aphasia around 195 ms over frontal electrodes, although this effect was not corrected for multiple comparisons. These results show that there is potential to capture language processing impairments in individuals with aphasia by measuring neural tracking of continuous speech. However, more research is needed to validate these results. Nonetheless, this exploratory study shows that neural tracking of naturalistic, continuous speech presents a powerful approach to studying aphasia.

Funder

European Research Council

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek

Fonds National de la Recherche Luxembourg

Publisher

Wiley

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