posted on 2009-04-22, 00:00authored byRobert Leech, Lori HoltLori Holt, Joseph T Devlin, Frederic Dick
Regions of the human temporal lobe show greater activation for speech than for other sounds. These differences may reflect
intrinsically specialized domain-specific adaptations for processing speech, or they may be driven by the significant expertise we
have in listening to the speech signal. To test the expertise hypothesis, we used a video-game-based paradigm that tacitly trained
listeners to categorize acoustically complex, artificial nonlinguistic sounds. Before and after training, we used functional MRI to
measure how expertise with these sounds modulated temporal lobe activation. Participants’ ability to explicitly categorize the
nonspeech sounds predicted the change in pretraining to posttraining activation in speech-sensitive regions of the left posterior
superior temporal sulcus, suggesting that emergent auditory expertise may help drive this functional regionalization. Thus,
seemingly domain-specific patterns of neural activation in higher cortical regions may be driven in part by experience-based
restructuring of high-dimensional perceptual space.