web analytics
Categories
Auditory Perception Auditory Working Memory Events fMRI Neural Oscillations Neural Phase Posters

Come and find us at CNS 2014 in Boston this weekend

The Obleser lab will be pre­sent­ing four posters at this year’s Annu­al Meet­ing of the Cog­ni­tive Neu­ro­science Soci­ety in Boston.

If you hap­pen to be there, come check us out!

A125Hemo­dy­nam­ic sig­na­tures of (mis-)perceiving tem­po­ral change
Her­rmann, Bjoern

C63Tem­po­ral pre­dictabil­i­ty atten­u­ates decay in sen­so­ry memory
Wilsch, Anna

D54Stim­u­lus dis­crim­inabil­i­ty and pre­dic­tive­ness mod­u­late alpha oscil­la­tions in a per­cep­tu­al­ly demand­ing mem­o­ry task
Wöst­mann, Malte

D130Slow acoustic fluc­tu­a­tions entrain low-fre­quen­cy neur­al oscil­la­tions and deter­mine psy­choa­coustic performance
Hen­ry, Molly

Categories
Editorial Notes

Wel­come Sung-Joo Lim & Alex Brandmeyer

We wel­come Sung-Joo Lim (KR) & Alex Brand­mey­er (US) as new post­doc­tor­al researchers in the group.

Sung-Joo very recent­ly received her Ph.D. from the Carnegie Mel­lon Uni­ver­si­ty, Pitts­burgh, PA (US), after

Inves­ti­gat­ing the Neur­al Basis of Sound Cat­e­go­ry Learn­ing with­in a Nat­u­ral­is­tic Inci­den­tal Task

See her abstract
Adults have noto­ri­ous dif­fi­cul­ty learn­ing non-native speech cat­e­gories even with exten­sive train­ing with stan­dard tasks pro­vid­ing explic­it tri­al-by-tri­al feed­back. Recent research in gen­er­al audi­to­ry cat­e­go­ry learn­ing demon­strates that videogame-based train­ing, which incor­po­rates fea­tures that mod­el the nat­u­ral­is­tic learn­ing envi­ron­ment, leads to fast and robust learn­ing of sound cat­e­gories. Unlike stan­dard tasks, the videogame par­a­digm does not require overt cat­e­go­riza­tion of or explic­it atten­tion to sounds; lis­ten­ers learn sounds inci­den­tal­ly as the game encour­ages the func­tion­al use of sounds in an envi­ron­ment, in which actions and feed­back are tight­ly linked to task suc­cess. These char­ac­ter­is­tics may engage rein­force­ment learn­ing sys­tems, which can poten­tial­ly gen­er­ate inter­nal feed­back sig­nals from the stria­tum. How­ev­er, the influ­ence of stri­atal sig­nals on per­cep­tu­al learn­ing and plas­tic­i­ty online dur­ing train­ing has yet to be estab­lished. This dis­ser­ta­tion work focus­es on the pos­si­bil­i­ty that this type of train­ing can lead to behav­ioral learn­ing of non-native speech cat­e­gories, and on the inves­ti­ga­tion of neur­al process­es pos­tu­lat­ed to be sig­nif­i­cant for induc­ing inci­den­tal learn­ing of sound cat­e­gories with­in the more nat­u­ral­is­tic train­ing envi­ron­ment by using fMRI. Over­all, our results sug­gest that reward-relat­ed sig­nals from the stria­tum influ­ence per­cep­tu­al rep­re­sen­ta­tions in regions asso­ci­at­ed with the pro­cess­ing of reli­able infor­ma­tion that can improve per­for­mance with­in a nat­u­ral­is­tic learn­ing task.

Alex very recent­ly received his Ph.D. from the Rad­boud Uni­ver­si­ty of Nijmegen (NL), address­ing his the­sis top­ic with

Audi­to­ry brain-com­put­er inter­faces for per­cep­tu­al learn­ing in speech and music

See his abstract
We per­ceive the sounds in our envi­ron­ment, such as lan­guage and music, effort­less­ly and trans­par­ent­ly, unaware of the com­plex neu­ro­phys­i­o­log­i­cal mech­a­nisms that under­lie our expe­ri­ences. Using elec­troen­cephalog­ra­phy (EEG) and tech­niques from the field of machine learn­ing, it’s pos­si­ble to mon­i­tor our per­cep­tion of the audi­to­ry world in real-time and to pin­point indi­vid­ual dif­fer­ences in per­cep­tu­al abil­i­ties relat­ed to native-lan­guage back­ground and audi­to­ry expe­ri­ence. Going fur­ther, these same meth­ods can be used to pro­vide indi­vid­u­als with neu­ro­feed­back dur­ing audi­to­ry per­cep­tion as a means of mod­u­lat­ing brain respons­es to sounds, with the even­tu­al aim of incor­po­rat­ing these meth­ods into edu­ca­tion­al set­tings to aid in audi­to­ry per­cep­tu­al learning.

Wish­ing you all the best.

Categories
Auditory Working Memory Degraded Acoustics EEG / MEG Executive Functions Neural Oscillations Papers Publications Speech

New Paper out: Wilsch, Hen­ry, Her­rmann et al.

Quite recent­ly Cere­bral Cor­tex published

Alpha Oscil­la­to­ry Dynam­ics Index Tem­po­ral Expec­ta­tion Ben­e­fits in Work­ing Memory

by Anna Wilsch, Mol­ly J Hen­ry, Björn Her­rmann, Burkhard Maess, and Jonas Obleser.

Check the abstract below or fol­low that link to get the full arti­cle.

Abstract
Enhanced alpha pow­er com­pared with a base­line can reflect states of increased cog­ni­tive load, for exam­ple, when lis­ten­ing to speech in noise. Can knowl­edge about “when” to lis­ten (tem­po­ral expec­ta­tions) poten­tial­ly coun­ter­act cog­ni­tive load and con­comi­tant­ly reduce alpha? The cur­rent mag­ne­toen­cephalog­ra­phy (MEG) exper­i­ment induced cog­ni­tive load using an audi­to­ry delayed-match­ing-to-sam­ple task with 2 syl­la­bles S1 and S2 pre­sent­ed in speech-shaped noise. Tem­po­ral expec­ta­tion about the occur­rence of S1 was manip­u­lat­ed in 3 dif­fer­ent cue con­di­tions: “Neu­tral” (unin­for­ma­tive about forepe­ri­od), “ear­ly-cued” (short forepe­ri­od), and “late-cued” (long forepe­ri­od). Alpha pow­er through­out the tri­al was high­est when the cue was unin­for­ma­tive about the onset time of S1 (neu­tral) and low­est for the late-cued con­di­tion. This alpha-reduc­ing effect of late com­pared with neu­tral cues was most evi­dent dur­ing mem­o­ry reten­tion in noise and orig­i­nat­ed pri­mar­i­ly in the right insu­la. More­over, indi­vid­ual alpha effects dur­ing reten­tion account­ed best for observed indi­vid­ual per­for­mance dif­fer­ences between late-cued and neu­tral con­di­tions, indi­cat­ing a trade­off between allo­ca­tion of neur­al resources and the ben­e­fits drawn from tem­po­ral cues. Over­all, the results indi­cate that tem­po­ral expec­ta­tions can facil­i­tate the encod­ing of speech in noise, and con­comi­tant­ly reduce neur­al mark­ers of cog­ni­tive load.

Ref­er­ences

  • Wilsch A, Hen­ry MJ, Her­rmann B, Maess B, Obleser J. Alpha Oscil­la­to­ry Dynam­ics Index Tem­po­ral Expec­ta­tion Ben­e­fits in Work­ing Mem­o­ry. Cereb Cor­tex. 2014 Jan 31. PMID: 24488943. [Open with Read]
Categories
EEG / MEG Neural Oscillations Perception Posters Publications

Col­in Cher­ry Award 2014 goes to Malte Wöstmann

On this years SPIN (Speech in Noise) work­shop in Mar­seille, our very own Malte Wöst­mann received the Col­in Cher­ry  Best Poster Award, elect­ed by work­shop attendees.

Judge for your­self and check out the Poster (PDF) here

Colin Cherry Award 2014 goes to Malte Wöstmann
Col­in Cher­ry Award 2014 goes to Malte Wöstmann
Categories
Auditory Cortex Auditory Neuroscience Auditory Perception EEG / MEG Evoked Activity Papers Perception Publications

New paper in press: Her­rmann, Schlicht­ing, & Obleser, Jour­nal of Neuroscience

Björn Her­rmann has yet anoth­er paper in press in the Jour­nal of Neuroscience!

Dynam­ic Range Adap­ta­tion to Spec­tral Stim­u­lus Sta­tis­tics in Human Audi­to­ry Cortex

The paper is now avail­able online free of charge, and—funnily enough—appeared right on Jan­u­ary 1, 2014.

Screen Shot 2014-01-02 at 14.38.58

Ref­er­ences

  • Her­rmann B, Schlicht­ing N, Obleser J. Dynam­ic range adap­ta­tion to spec­tral stim­u­lus sta­tis­tics in human audi­to­ry cor­tex. J Neu­rosci. 2014 Jan 1;34(1):327–31. PMID: 24381293. [Open with Read]
Categories
Editorial Notes Events Media Publications

SNAP sum­ma­ry and impressions

The SNAP work­shop (Sig­nal and Noise along the Audi­to­ry Path­way) is behind us.

It is safe to say that it has been a great suc­cess. We will care­ful­ly look into the eval­u­a­tion forms you pro­vid­ed, and we will inform here in due course whether and when a 2nd SNAP (poten­tial­ly 2015) is in the making.

Let us thank all of you who made SNAP hap­pen. It turned a fun and suc­cess­ful sci­en­tif­ic year 2013 into an even greater one. Thank you! We hope to see you soon again, somewhere.

Now, here are some impres­sions of SNAP 2013:

P.S. Here you find Jonas’ clos­ing sum­ma­ry notes:

SNAP 2013 ad hoc sum­ma­ry — Jonas Obleser

 

Categories
Editorial Notes Events

SNAP Day 1 is behind us

A great day 1 of the SNAP work­shop is behind us. It could go on for­ev­er, if it would be accord­ing to me.

While Thomas Lun­ner was sad­ly stopped short by new pro­gram com­mit­tee mem­ber, pan-Euro­pean storm ras­cal “Xaver”, 45 oth­ers made it suc­ces­ful­ly to the Max Planck in Leipzig, wit­ness­ing Ingrid John­srude, Torsten Dau, Alexan­dra Ben­dix­en, Maria Chait, Jonathan Peelle, and Peter Lakatos bring­ing the house down.

With the speak­ers’ sup­port, I will poten­tial­ly post a sum­ma­ry pdf of my clos­ing remarks, which I will give tomor­row, for pub­lic access.

As for now, feel free to fol­low Car­olyn McGet­ti­gan and Jonathan Peelle cov­er­ing some of it as SNAP con­tin­ues into day 2 (#SNAPleipzig).

SNAP 2013 Group Photo

Categories
Ageing Auditory Neuroscience Auditory Speech Processing Clinical relevance Degraded Acoustics Executive Functions fMRI Hearing Loss Noise-Vocoded Speech Papers Publications Speech

New paper in press: Erb & Obleser, Fron­tiers in Sys­tems Neuroscience

Julia Erb just got accept­ed the third study of her PhD project,

Upreg­u­la­tion of cog­ni­tive con­trol net­works in old­er adults’ speech comprehension

It will appear in Fron­tiers in Sys­tems Neu­ro­science soon.

The data are an exten­sion (in old­er adults) of Julia’s Jour­nal of Neu­ro­science paper ear­li­er this year.

Ref­er­ences

  • Erb J, Obleser J. Upreg­u­la­tion of cog­ni­tive con­trol net­works in old­er adults’ speech com­pre­hen­sion. Front Syst Neu­rosci. 2013 Dec 24;7:116. PMID: 24399939. [Open with Read]