Neural Prediction Errors Distinguish Perception and Misperception of Speech

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Neural Prediction Errors Distinguish Perception and Misperception of Speech. / Blank, Helen; Spangenberg, Marlene; Davis, Matthew H.

in: J NEUROSCI, Jahrgang 38, Nr. 27, 04.07.2018, S. 6076-6089.

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@article{360e4053400b459885020f8a0bdc7e6d,
title = "Neural Prediction Errors Distinguish Perception and Misperception of Speech",
abstract = "Humans use prior expectations to improve perception, especially of sensory signals that are degraded or ambiguous. However, if sensory input deviates from prior expectations, then correct perception depends on adjusting or rejecting prior expectations. Failure to adjust or reject the prior leads to perceptual illusions, especially if there is partial overlap (and thus partial mismatch) between expectations and input. With speech, “slips of the ear” occur when expectations lead to misperception. For instance, an entomologist might be more susceptible to hear “The ants are my friends” for “The answer, my friend” (in the Bob Dylan song Blowing in the Wind). Here, we contrast two mechanisms by which prior expectations may lead to misperception of degraded speech. First, clear representations of the common sounds in the prior and input (i.e., expected sounds) may lead to incorrect confirmation of the prior. Second, insufficient representations of sounds that deviate between prior and input (i.e., prediction errors) could lead to deception. We used crossmodal predictions from written words that partially match degraded speech to compare neural responses when male and female human listeners were deceived into accepting the prior or correctly reject it. Combined behavioral and multivariate representational similarity analysis of fMRI data show that veridical perception of degraded speech is signaled by representations of prediction error in the left superior temporal sulcus. Instead of using top-down processes to support perception of expected sensory input, our findings suggest that the strength of neural prediction error representations distinguishes correct perception and misperception.",
author = "Helen Blank and Marlene Spangenberg and Davis, {Matthew H.}",
year = "2018",
month = jul,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3258-17.2018",
language = "English",
volume = "38",
pages = "6076--6089",
journal = "J NEUROSCI",
issn = "0270-6474",
publisher = "Society for Neuroscience",
number = "27",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Neural Prediction Errors Distinguish Perception and Misperception of Speech

AU - Blank, Helen

AU - Spangenberg, Marlene

AU - Davis, Matthew H.

PY - 2018/7/4

Y1 - 2018/7/4

N2 - Humans use prior expectations to improve perception, especially of sensory signals that are degraded or ambiguous. However, if sensory input deviates from prior expectations, then correct perception depends on adjusting or rejecting prior expectations. Failure to adjust or reject the prior leads to perceptual illusions, especially if there is partial overlap (and thus partial mismatch) between expectations and input. With speech, “slips of the ear” occur when expectations lead to misperception. For instance, an entomologist might be more susceptible to hear “The ants are my friends” for “The answer, my friend” (in the Bob Dylan song Blowing in the Wind). Here, we contrast two mechanisms by which prior expectations may lead to misperception of degraded speech. First, clear representations of the common sounds in the prior and input (i.e., expected sounds) may lead to incorrect confirmation of the prior. Second, insufficient representations of sounds that deviate between prior and input (i.e., prediction errors) could lead to deception. We used crossmodal predictions from written words that partially match degraded speech to compare neural responses when male and female human listeners were deceived into accepting the prior or correctly reject it. Combined behavioral and multivariate representational similarity analysis of fMRI data show that veridical perception of degraded speech is signaled by representations of prediction error in the left superior temporal sulcus. Instead of using top-down processes to support perception of expected sensory input, our findings suggest that the strength of neural prediction error representations distinguishes correct perception and misperception.

AB - Humans use prior expectations to improve perception, especially of sensory signals that are degraded or ambiguous. However, if sensory input deviates from prior expectations, then correct perception depends on adjusting or rejecting prior expectations. Failure to adjust or reject the prior leads to perceptual illusions, especially if there is partial overlap (and thus partial mismatch) between expectations and input. With speech, “slips of the ear” occur when expectations lead to misperception. For instance, an entomologist might be more susceptible to hear “The ants are my friends” for “The answer, my friend” (in the Bob Dylan song Blowing in the Wind). Here, we contrast two mechanisms by which prior expectations may lead to misperception of degraded speech. First, clear representations of the common sounds in the prior and input (i.e., expected sounds) may lead to incorrect confirmation of the prior. Second, insufficient representations of sounds that deviate between prior and input (i.e., prediction errors) could lead to deception. We used crossmodal predictions from written words that partially match degraded speech to compare neural responses when male and female human listeners were deceived into accepting the prior or correctly reject it. Combined behavioral and multivariate representational similarity analysis of fMRI data show that veridical perception of degraded speech is signaled by representations of prediction error in the left superior temporal sulcus. Instead of using top-down processes to support perception of expected sensory input, our findings suggest that the strength of neural prediction error representations distinguishes correct perception and misperception.

U2 - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3258-17.2018

DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3258-17.2018

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

VL - 38

SP - 6076

EP - 6089

JO - J NEUROSCI

JF - J NEUROSCI

SN - 0270-6474

IS - 27

ER -