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  3. EEG Spatiotemporal Patterns Underlying Self-other Voice Discrimination.
 

EEG Spatiotemporal Patterns Underlying Self-other Voice Discrimination.

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BORIS DOI
10.48350/162962
Date of Publication
April 20, 2022
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Zentrum für Translati...

Contributor
Iannotti, Giannina Rita
Orepic, Pavo
Brunet, Denis
König, Thomasorcid-logo
Zentrum für Translationale Forschung der Universitätsklinik für Psychiatrie und Psychotherapie
Alcoba-Banqueri, Sixto
Garin, Dorian F A
Schaller, Karl
Blanke, Olaf
Michel, Christoph M
Subject(s)

500 - Science::570 - ...

Series
Cerebral cortex
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
1047-3211
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.1093/cercor/bhab329
PubMed ID
34649280
Uncontrolled Keywords

bone conduction high-...

Description
There is growing evidence showing that the representation of the human "self" recruits special systems across different functions and modalities. Compared to self-face and self-body representations, few studies have investigated neural underpinnings specific to self-voice. Moreover, self-voice stimuli in those studies were consistently presented through air and lacking bone conduction, rendering the sound of self-voice stimuli different to the self-voice heard during natural speech. Here, we combined psychophysics, voice-morphing technology, and high-density EEG in order to identify the spatiotemporal patterns underlying self-other voice discrimination (SOVD) in a population of 26 healthy participants, both with air- and bone-conducted stimuli. We identified a self-voice-specific EEG topographic map occurring around 345 ms post-stimulus and activating a network involving insula, cingulate cortex, and medial temporal lobe structures. Occurrence of this map was modulated both with SOVD task performance and bone conduction. Specifically, the better participants performed at SOVD task, the less frequently they activated this network. In addition, the same network was recruited less frequently with bone conduction, which, accordingly, increased the SOVD task performance. This work could have an important clinical impact. Indeed, it reveals neural correlates of SOVD impairments, believed to account for auditory-verbal hallucinations, a common and highly distressing psychiatric symptom.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/58834
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FileFile TypeFormatSizeLicensePublisher/Copright statementContent
bhab329.pdftextAdobe PDF1.2 MBAttribution-NonCommercial (CC BY-NC 4.0)publishedOpen
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