AC alumna Anna Wilsch has a new paper in press in Neuroimage, with Toralf Neuling, Jonas Obleser, and Christoph Herrmann: “Transcranial alternating current stimulation with speech envelopes modulates speech comprehension”. In this proof-of-concept–like paper, we demonstrate that using the speech envelope as a “pilot signal” for electrically stimulating the human brain, while a listener tries to comprehend that speech signal buried in noise, does modulate the listener’s speech–in–noise comprehension abilities.
Category: EEG / MEG
Read all about neural irregularity in aging brains and how it relates to perceptual decisions: New paper by PhD student Leo Waschke.
Now available online:
https://goo.gl/F4dFfe
Will be at the Society for Neuroscience Meeting next week in DC? Come find us in the Wednesday afternoon session with a bunch of (we think) very cool attention-related posters (Poster boards UU42–UU46):
804.06. Auditory attention and predictive processing co-modulate speech comprehension in middle-aged adults
*S. TUNE, M. WÖSTMANN, J. OBLESER;
804.05. Implicit temporal predictability enhances auditory pitch-discrimination sensitivity
*S. K. HERBST, M. PLÖCHL, A. HERRMANN, J. OBLESER;
804.09. Are visual and auditory detection performance driven by a supramodal attentional rhythm?
*M. PLOECHL, S. KASTNER, I. C. FIEBELKORN, J. OBLESER;
804.08. Spatio-temporal expectations exert differential effects on visual and auditory discrimination
*A. WILSCH, J. OBLESER, C. E. SCHROEDER, C. S. HERRMANN, S. HAEGENS
804.07. Transcranial 10-Hz stimulation but also eye closure modulate auditory attention
*M. WÖSTMANN, L.-M. SCHMITT, J. VOSSKUHL, C. S. HERRMANN, J. OBLESER
My colleagues and collaborator Peter Lakatos and Molly Henry and I took to our desks and Matlab consoles, when Assaf Breska and Leon Deouell came out earlier this year with their paper in Plos Biology.
We had a few things to say about what we then perceived as a rather pessimistic assessment of neural entrainment. However, since then a great and quite frutiful discussion has emerged, now published in Plos Biology:
Meanwhile, Breska and Deouell added some more behavioural data and replied to us (now also published).
— Enjoy!
Here comes a new paper in Nature Communications by former AC postdoc Molly Henry, with former fellow postdoc AC alumnus Björn Herrmann, our tireless lab manager, Dunja Kunke, and myself! It is a late (to us quite important) result from our lab’s tenure at the Max Planck in Leipzig,
Henry, M.J., Herrmann, B., Kunke, D., Obleser, J. (In press). Aging affects the balance of neural entrainment and top-down neural modulation in the listening brain. Nature Communications.
—Congratulations, Molly!
Towards a brain-controlled hearing aid: PhD student Lorenz Fiedler shows how attended and ignored auditory streams are differently represented in the neural responses and how the focus of auditory attention can be extracted from EEG signals recorded at electrodes placed inside the ear-canal and around the ear.
Auditory Cognition’s own Malte Wöstmann is in press in Cerebral Cortex with his latest offering on how attentional control manifests in alpha power changes: Ignoring speech can be beneficial (if comprehending speech potentially detracts from another task), and we here show how this change in listening goals turns around the pattern of alpha-power changes with changing speech degradation. (We will update as the paper becomes available online.)
Wöstmann, M., Lim, S.J., & Obleser, J. (2017). The human neural alpha response to speech is a proxy of attentional control. Cerebral Cortex. In press.
We are proud to publish our recent study on how network dynamics of beta-band oscillations in the human brain mediate response speed in auditory perceptual decision-making. This work will appear soon in the first volume of the promising journal Network Neuroscience.
Pre-print link http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/12/19/095356