Science
Neurofeedback enhances a neural signature of selective attention to speech in cocktail-party settings
Key Points
Understanding speech in noisy situations is challenging and often fails due to attentional rather than sensory deficits. We report here that neurofeedback can enhance a neural signature of selective attention to speech in a cocktail-party setting. Neural responses to speech were quantified in participants' electroencephalogram (EEG) while they attended to one of two audiobooks, presented simultaneously.
Understanding speech in noisy situations is challenging and often fails due to attentional rather than sensory deficits. We report here that neurofeedback can enhance a neural signature of selective attention to speech in a cocktail-party setting. Neural responses to speech were quantified in participants' electroencephalogram (EEG) while they attended to one of two audiobooks, presented simultaneously. After each 22s-segment of speech, the participants' N1 component was extracted from the temporal response function (TRF). The N1 component is known to be sensitive to attention. During a ~49-min training session, N1 amplitude values were displayed visually to participants so that they could learn to strengthen their neural responses to target speech and minimise their responses to distracting speech. During neurofeedback training, we found an enhanced N1 component in the response to target audiobooks that was specific to EEG channels used to provide feedback, and not present in a control group that received sham feedback. At right-lateralised fronto-central channels, enhanced N1 components correlated with improvements in a measure of speech comprehension (multiple-choice content questions). These results indicate that neural responses to speech can be regulated through neurofeedback and open up new possibilities to train attentional listening in populations struggling to understand speech in noise.