Complexity of STG signals and linguistic rhythm: a methodological study for EEG data

Author:

Silva Pereira Silvana1ORCID,Özer Ege Ekin1ORCID,Sebastian-Galles Nuria1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for Brain and Cognition, Department of Information and Communications Technologies, Universitat Pompeu Fabra , 08005 Barcelona , Spain

Abstract

Abstract The superior temporal and the Heschl’s gyri of the human brain play a fundamental role in speech processing. Neurons synchronize their activity to the amplitude envelope of the speech signal to extract acoustic and linguistic features, a process known as neural tracking/entrainment. Electroencephalography has been extensively used in language-related research due to its high temporal resolution and reduced cost, but it does not allow for a precise source localization. Motivated by the lack of a unified methodology for the interpretation of source reconstructed signals, we propose a method based on modularity and signal complexity. The procedure was tested on data from an experiment in which we investigated the impact of native language on tracking to linguistic rhythms in two groups: English natives and Spanish natives. In the experiment, we found no effect of native language but an effect of language rhythm. Here, we compare source projected signals in the auditory areas of both hemispheres for the different conditions using nonparametric permutation tests, modularity, and a dynamical complexity measure. We found increasing values of complexity for decreased regularity in the stimuli, giving us the possibility to conclude that languages with less complex rhythms are easier to track by the auditory cortex.

Funder

Spanish Ministry for Science and Innovation

Economical and Social Research Council

Institució Catalana de Recerca i Estudis Avançats

Catalan Government

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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