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Researchers Identify Brain's Speech Processing Mechanism

August 2009

Editor: Here's more progress on understanding how we hear, from the folks at Hebrew University of Jerusalem.

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Researchers from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, have succeeded for the first time in devising a model that describes and identifies a basic cellular mechanism that enables networks of neurons to efficiently decode speech in changing conditions, says a statement released by the university.

The research may lead to the upgrading of computer algorithms for faster and more precise speech recognition and to the development of innovative treatments for auditory problems among adults and young people, according to the statement.

The brain has the capability to process speech and other complex auditory stimuli and to make sense of them, even when the sound signals reach our ears in a slowed, accelerated, or distorted manner, says the statement. However, the neuronal mechanisms that enable the brain to perceive a word correctly, for example, that is pronounced in different ways by different speakers or to understand a heavy accent, was a mystery to scientists until now, according to the statement.

Research associate Dr. Robert Gütig and Professor Haim Sompolinsky of the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences at the Hebrew University have succeeded in describing a cellular process by which sensory neurons in the brain can automatically adjust their perceptual clocks and thus correct large temporal variations in the rate of sounds and speech that arrive from the environment, says the statement.

According to their findings, which were recently published in the PLoS Biology journal, the biophysical mechanism that exists in the brain enables single nerve cells in the cerebral cortex to perform word identification tasks almost perfectly, says the statement.

The understanding of the process of speech decoding and the possibilities of its implementation in technology-by the development of neural network algorithms for the identification and processing of various patterns of sound signals-could lead to the significant upgrading of speech-recognition technology in communications and computing, for instance in telephone voice dialing or in voice and sound-monitoring devices, says the statement.

The technology has been patented by Yissum, the Hebrew University's technology transfer company.