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Neural Systems Involved When Attending to a Speaker.


ABSTRACT: Remembering what a speaker said depends on attention. During conversational speech, the emphasis is on working memory, but listening to a lecture encourages episodic memory encoding. With simultaneous interference from background speech, the need for auditory vigilance increases. We recreated these context-dependent demands on auditory attention in 2 ways. The first was to require participants to attend to one speaker in either the absence or presence of a distracting background speaker. The second was to alter the task demand, requiring either an immediate or delayed recall of the content of the attended speech. Across 2 fMRI studies, common activated regions associated with segregating attended from unattended speech were the right anterior insula and adjacent frontal operculum (aI/FOp), the left planum temporale, and the precuneus. In contrast, activity in a ventral right frontoparietal system was dependent on both the task demand and the presence of a competing speaker. Additional multivariate analyses identified other domain-general frontoparietal systems, where activity increased during attentive listening but was modulated little by the need for speech stream segregation in the presence of 2 speakers. These results make predictions about impairments in attentive listening in different communicative contexts following focal or diffuse brain pathology.

SUBMITTER: Kamourieh S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4816781 | biostudies-literature | 2015 Nov

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Neural Systems Involved When Attending to a Speaker.

Kamourieh Salwa S   Braga Rodrigo M RM   Leech Robert R   Newbould Rexford D RD   Malhotra Paresh P   Wise Richard J S RJ  

Cerebral cortex (New York, N.Y. : 1991) 20150116 11


Remembering what a speaker said depends on attention. During conversational speech, the emphasis is on working memory, but listening to a lecture encourages episodic memory encoding. With simultaneous interference from background speech, the need for auditory vigilance increases. We recreated these context-dependent demands on auditory attention in 2 ways. The first was to require participants to attend to one speaker in either the absence or presence of a distracting background speaker. The sec  ...[more]

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