The effect of regular rhythm on the perception of linguistic and non-linguistic auditory input
Date
2022Author
Rassili, Outhmane
Ordin, Mikhail
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Rassili, O, Ordin, M. The effect of regular rhythm on the perception of linguistic and non-linguistic auditory input. Eur J Neurosci. 2022; 55( 11–12): 3365– 3372. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.15029
European Journal of Neuroscience
European Journal of Neuroscience
Abstract
Regular distribution of auditory stimuli over time can facilitate perception and attention.
However, such effects have to date only been observed in separate studies using
either linguistic or non-linguistic materials. This has made it difficult to compare
the effects of rhythmic regularity on attention across domains. The current study
was designed to provide an explicit within-subject comparison of reaction times and
accuracy in an auditory target-detection task using sequences of regularly and irregularly
distributed syllables (linguistic material) and environmental sounds (nonlinguistic
material). We explored how reaction times and accuracy were modulated
by regular and irregular rhythms in a sound- (non-linguistic) and syllable-monitoring
(linguistic) task performed by native Spanish speakers (N = 25). Surprisingly, we did
not observe that regular rhythm exerted a facilitatory effect on reaction times or accuracy.
Further exploratory analysis showed that targets that appear later in sequences
of syllables and sounds are identified more quickly. In late targets, reaction times
in stimuli with a regular rhythm were lower than in stimuli with irregular rhythm
for linguistic material, but not for non-linguistic material. The difference in reaction
times on stimuli with regular and irregular rhythm for late targets was also larger
for linguistic than for non-linguistic material. This suggests a modulatory effect of
rhythm on linguistic stimuli only once the percept of temporal isochrony has been established.
We suggest that temporal isochrony modulates attention to linguistic more
than to non-linguistic stimuli because the human auditory system is tuned to process
speech. The results, however, need to be further tested in confirmatory studies.