Affiliations: | | Dept. Speech, Language, Hearing Sciences | Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN, United States |
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High-probability grants
According to our matching algorithm, Ananthanarayan "Ravi" Krishnan is the likely recipient of the following grants.
Years |
Recipients |
Code |
Title / Keywords |
Matching score |
2007 — 2009 |
Krishnan, Ananthanarayan |
R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Language-Dependent Plasticity in the Encoding of Pitch in the Human Brainstem @ Purdue University West Lafayette
[unreadable] DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Crosslanguage studies of the perception of lexical tones have suggested that attention-modulated pitch processing at the cortical level may be influenced by language experience. We recently demonstrated that preattentive stages of pitch processing at the human brainstem level may also be influenced by language experience as reflected in the scalp-recorded human frequency following response. Our long term objective is to advance our knowledge of how pitch mechanisms in the auditory brainstem reorganize with experience to enhance encoding of behaviorally relevant sounds and to determine their role in the hierarchical processing of the temporal structure of sound. By adopting a crosslanguage approach (Mandarin, Thai, English) in tandem with a variety of speech and nonspeech stimuli varying in their lexical status and/or pitch contour, we are able to directly address questions of domain- as well as tone-specificity of the neural mechanisms mediating this pitch representation in the human brainstem. The specific aims are to assess: (1) language-dependent specificity of pitch representation for native f0 trajectories in a speech context; (2) language-dependent specificity of pitch representation for native f0 trajectories in a nonspeech context; (3) sensitivity of pitch representation to systematic temporal degradation in native f0 trajectories in a nonspeech context; (4) contour specificity of the pitch representation of native and nonnative contour f0 trajectories in a nonspeech context; (5) role of temporal- or spectral-based mechanisms underlying pitch extraction; and (6) laterality of experience- dependent brainstem reorganization for pitch representation. We hypothesize that temporal neural mechanisms mediating pitch representation are sensitive to a particular language and tonal dimensions; that this pitch representation in the native listeners is less susceptible to temporal degradation of pitch relevant information in the stimulus even when presented in a nonspeech context; that an ear advantage may even be evident at the brainstem since the inferior colliculus and auditory cortex share the same dominant contralateral pathway. Our findings promise to provide fresh insights as to how pitch processing at the brainstem level emerges from differential demands on auditory and linguistic processes that are shared by speech and nonspeech stimuli alike. Of relevance to the public health, a better understanding of how pitch encoding is influenced by language experience at the brainstem level will allow us to assess differentially the integrity of pitch representation in our increasingly multilingual population; to monitor non-invasively changes in pitch representation after retraining of language/hearing-impaired listeners from different language backgrounds; and to develop optimal, language-sensitive signal processing strategies for hearing prosthetic devices used by hearing-impaired listeners. Thus, auditory electrophysiology at the brainstem level can provide us with fresh insights into patients' difficulties in hearing and understanding speech and assist in the development of optimal signal processing strategies to remedy degraded neural representation. Our ability to favorably influence the recovery from hearing-related impairments will depend upon a better understanding of the neurobiological basis of language-dependent pitch processing in the human brainstem. The scalp recorded frequency following response (FFR) provides a noninvasive neural index of pitch representation at the brainstem level. If the aims of this project are achieved, FFRs can be incorporated into clinical practice to assess the integrity of pitch representation in a target population, to index changes in pitch representation before and after training, and to evaluate signal processing algorithms designed to recover degraded neural representation of pitch in conventional hearing aids and/or cochlear implants. [unreadable] [unreadable] [unreadable]
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0.915 |
2012 — 2016 |
Krishnan, Ananthanarayan |
R01Activity Code Description: To support a discrete, specified, circumscribed project to be performed by the named investigator(s) in an area representing his or her specific interest and competencies. |
Effects of Language Experience On Early Cortical and Subcortical Pitch Encoding
DESCRIPTION (provided by applicant): Cross language studies of tonal perception have suggested that language experience influences pitch processing at the cortical level. Our current research has focused on delineating the dimensions, and the underlying neural mechanisms of language experience-dependent enhancement of pitch in the human brainstem. Our long-term objective is to advance our knowledge of how pitch mechanisms at the two stages of processing interact to enhance encoding of behaviorally relevant sounds and to determine their respective roles in the hierarchical processing of the temporal structure of sound. A cross language approach utilizing a tonal language (Chinese) and a non-tonal control language (English) will permit us to distinguish between language-universal and language-dependent effects. Using speech and no speech stimuli varying in lexical status, pitch contour, and pitch salience, and recordings in quiet and adverse listening conditions will enable us to directly address questions of tone, feature, and contour specificity as well as the resilience of experience- dependent pitch representations to degradation in adverse listening conditions. We propose a novel electrophysiological approach to evaluate pitch representations at the brainstem (frequency following response, FFR) and auditory cortex (cortical pitch response, CPR) concurrently. Comparing these brainstem and cortical pitch representations with behavioral measures of pitch will allow us to determine if pitch-relevant neural activity contributes to the pitch percept. The specific aims are to assess (i) the sensitivity of the CPR to specific features of pitch; (ii) the characteristics of the language experience-dependent enhancement of pitch at the cortical level and its relationship with brainstem, and behavioral measures of pitch; and (iii) if experience- driven pitch mechanisms at the cortical and brainstem levels are more resilient to degradation in adverse listening conditions. Our hypothesis is that early, preattentive enhanced representation of pitch in the brainstem and auditory cortex of Chinese listeners reflects language-dependent influence of specific, linguistically-relevant parameters of the auditory signal, and that these robust and stable representations are less susceptible to degraded effects of noise and reverberation. Our findings promise to advance our knowledge about (i) how experience-driven pitch mechanisms in the brainstem and in the auditory cortex interact to enhance behaviorally relevant features of complex sounds important for pitch perception in quiet and degraded listening conditions. With this expanded knowledge base about the neurobiology of speech prosody in the human auditory system, we are in a better position to favorably influence the recovery from hearing-related impairments. Our scalp-recorded responses may be used as a new clinical tool to assess the integrity of pitch representation in a target population; monitor changes in pitch representation under a retraining protocol and/or in the development of optimal signal processing strategies for conventional hearing aids and/or cochlear implants. PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE: Speech prosody itself is clinically relevant because it is known to carry a large proportion of the communication load in non-tone as well as tone languages. Our ability to favorably influence the recovery from hearing-related impairments will depend upon a better understanding of the neurobiological basis of speech prosody in the human auditory system. These responses carrying pitch-relevant information may be used as a new clinical tool to assess the integrity of pitch representation in a target population; monitor changes in pitch representation under a retraining protocol and/or in the development of optimal signal processing strategies for conventional hearing aids and/or cochlear implants
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0.915 |