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Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants
Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants
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Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants
Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants

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Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants
Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants
Journal Article

Delta- and theta-band cortical tracking and phase-amplitude coupling to sung speech by infants

2022
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Overview
•Longitudinal EEG study in which 4, 7- & 11-month infants listened to nursery rhymes.•We demonstrate cortical speech tracking via delta & theta neural signals (mTRF).•Periodogram (PSD) analysis revealed stimulus related delta and theta PSD peaks.•Delta and theta driven phase amplitude coupling (PAC) was found at all ages.•Gamma frequency amplitudes displayed stronger PAC to low frequency phases than beta. The amplitude envelope of speech carries crucial low-frequency acoustic information that assists linguistic decoding at multiple time scales. Neurophysiological signals are known to track the amplitude envelope of adult-directed speech (ADS), particularly in the theta-band. Acoustic analysis of infant-directed speech (IDS) has revealed significantly greater modulation energy than ADS in an amplitude-modulation (AM) band centred on ∼2 Hz. Accordingly, cortical tracking of IDS by delta-band neural signals may be key to language acquisition. Speech also contains acoustic information within its higher-frequency bands (beta, gamma). Adult EEG and MEG studies reveal an oscillatory hierarchy, whereby low-frequency (delta, theta) neural phase dynamics temporally organize the amplitude of high-frequency signals (phase amplitude coupling, PAC). Whilst consensus is growing around the role of PAC in the matured adult brain, its role in the development of speech processing is unexplored. Here, we examined the presence and maturation of low-frequency (<12 Hz) cortical speech tracking in infants by recording EEG longitudinally from 60 participants when aged 4-, 7- and 11- months as they listened to nursery rhymes. After establishing stimulus-related neural signals in delta and theta, cortical tracking at each age was assessed in the delta, theta and alpha [control] bands using a multivariate temporal response function (mTRF) method. Delta-beta, delta-gamma, theta-beta and theta-gamma phase-amplitude coupling (PAC) was also assessed. Significant delta and theta but not alpha tracking was found. Significant PAC was present at all ages, with both delta and theta -driven coupling observed. [Display omitted]