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Top-down and bottom-up mechanisms as reflected by beta and gamma oscillations in speech perception: An individual-difference approach

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Recent neurophysiological studies have proposed distinct roles of β and γ oscillations in implementing top-down and bottom-up processes. The present study aims to test this hypothesis in the domain of… Click to show full abstract

Recent neurophysiological studies have proposed distinct roles of β and γ oscillations in implementing top-down and bottom-up processes. The present study aims to test this hypothesis in the domain of speech perception. We examined β and γ oscillations elicited to a tone contrast in a passive oddball paradigm, and their relationships with discrimination sensitivity d' and RT from two groups of healthy adults who showed high and low discrimination sensitivity to the contrast. The low-sensitivity group showed a significant reduction in β, which was further related to d'. Individual differences in RT were related to different frequency bands in the two groups, with a RT-β correlation in the low-sensitivity group, and a RT-γ relation in the high-sensitivity group. Based on these findings, we suggest that β, implicated in top-down processing, reflects individual differences in phonological representations, and that γ, involved in bottom-up processing, reflects individual differences in acoustic encoding.

Keywords: sensitivity; top bottom; sensitivity group; speech perception

Journal Title: Brain and Language
Year Published: 2019

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