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Neural indices and looking behaviors of audiovisual speech processing in infancy and early childhood

Language is a multimodal process with visual and auditory cues playing important roles in understanding speech. A well-controlled paradigm with audiovisually matched and mismatched syllables is often used to capture audiovisual (AV) speech processing. The ability to detect and integrate mismatching cues shows large individual variability across development and is linked to later language in typical development (TD) and social abilities in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, no study has used a multimethod approach to better understand AV speech processing in early development. The studies’ aims were to examine behavioral performance, gaze patterns, and neural indices of AV speech in: 1) TD preschoolers (N=60; females=35) and 2) infants at risk for developing ASD (high-risk, HR; N=37; females=10) and TD controls (low-risk, LR; N=42; females=21).
In Study 1, I investigated preschoolers’ gaze patterns and behavioral performance when presented with matched and mismatched AV speech and visual-only (lipreading) speech. As hypothesized, lipreading abilities were associated with children’s ability to integrate mismatching AV cues, and children looked towards the mouth when visual cues were helpful, specifically in lipreading conditions. Unexpectedly, looking time towards the mouth was not associated with the children’s ability to integrate mismatching AV cues. Study 2 examined how visual cues of AV speech modulated auditory event-related potentials (ERPs), and associations between ERPs and preschoolers’ behavioral performance during an AV speech task. As hypothesized, the auditory ERPs were attenuated during AV speech compared to auditory-only speech. Additionally, individual differences in their neural processing of auditory and visual cues predicted which cue the child attended to in mismatched AV speech. In Study 3, I investigated ERPs of AV speech in LR and HR 12-month-olds and their association with language abilities at 18-months. Unexpectedly, I found no group differences: all infants were able to detect mismatched AV speech as measured through a more negative ERP response. As hypothesized, more mature neural processing of AV speech integration, measured as a more positive ERP response to fusible AV cues, predicted later language across all infants. These results highlight the importance of using multimethod approaches to understand variability in AV speech processing at two developmental stages. / 2021-11-12T00:00:00Z

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bu.edu/oai:open.bu.edu:2144/38792
Date12 November 2019
CreatorsFinch, Kayla
ContributorsTager-Flusberg, Helen
Source SetsBoston University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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