Title of article
Event-related potentials reflect spectral differences in speech and non-speech stimuli in children and adults
Author/Authors
R. ?eponien?، نويسنده , , M. Torki، نويسنده , , P. Alku، نويسنده , , A. Koyama، نويسنده , , J. Townsend، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
18
From page
1560
To page
1577
Abstract
Objective
Event-related brain potentials (ERP) may provide tools for examining normal and abnormal language development. To clarify functional significance of auditory ERPs, we examined ERP indices of spectral differences in speech and non-speech sounds.
Methods
Three Spectral Items (BA, DA, GA) were presented as three Stimulus Types: syllables, non-phonetics, and consonant–vowel transitions (CVT). Fourteen 7- to 10-year-old children and 14 adults were presented with equiprobable Spectral Item sequences blocked by Stimulus Type.
Results
Spectral Item effect appeared as P1, P2, N2, and N4 amplitude variations. The P2 was sensitive to all Stimulus Types in both groups. In adults, the P1 was also sensitive to transitions while the N4 was sensitive to syllables. In children, only the 50-ms CVT stimuli elicited N2 and N4 spectral effects. In both groups, non-phonetic stimuli elicited larger N1–P2 amplitudes while speech stimuli elicited larger N2–N4 amplitudes.
Conclusions
Auditory feature processing is reflected by P1–P2 and N2–N4 peaks and matures earlier than supra-sensory integrative mechanisms, reflected by N1–P2 peaks. Auditory P2 appears to pertain to both processing types.
Significance
These results delineate an orderly processing organization whereby direct feature mapping occurs earlier in processing and, in part, serves sound detection whereas relational mapping occurs later in processing and serves sound identification.
Keywords
Speech , Non-speech , Auditory , children , ERP , event-related potentials
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Clinical Neurophysiology
Record number
524705
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