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Seminar✓ Recording AvailableNeuroscience

Decoding the neural processing of speech

Tobias Reichenbach

Prof

Friedrich-Alexander-University

Schedule
Tuesday, March 23, 2021

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Schedule

Tuesday, March 23, 2021

11:00 AM Europe/London

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Host: Imperial Centre for Neurotechnology

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Imperial Centre for Neurotechnology

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

Understanding speech in noisy backgrounds requires selective attention to a particular speaker. Humans excel at this challenging task, while current speech recognition technology still struggles when background noise is loud. The neural mechanisms by which we process speech remain, however, poorly understood, not least due to the complexity of natural speech. Here we describe recent progress obtained through applying machine-learning to neuroimaging data of humans listening to speech in different types of background noise. In particular, we develop statistical models to relate characteristic features of speech such as pitch, amplitude fluctuations and linguistic surprisal to neural measurements. We find neural correlates of speech processing both at the subcortical level, related to the pitch, as well as at the cortical level, related to amplitude fluctuations and linguistic structures. We also show that some of these measures allow to diagnose disorders of consciousness. Our findings may be applied in smart hearing aids that automatically adjust speech processing to assist a user, as well as in the diagnosis of brain disorders.

Topics

amplitude fluctuationsbackground noisehearinglinguistic surprisalmachine learningneural correlatesneuroimagingpitchselective attentionspeech processing

About the Speaker

Tobias Reichenbach

Prof

Friedrich-Alexander-University

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.bg.ic.ac.uk/research/reichenbach/index.html

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