Actively Recruiting
Language and Brain Rhythms
Led by Hospices Civils de Lyon · Updated on 2026-01-29
356
Participants Needed
1
Research Sites
295 weeks
Total Duration
On this page
AI-Summary
What this Trial Is About
For humans and other animals, predicting the timing of sensory events is essential for their daily behavior. Importantly, natural sensory stimulation (such as movements, music, or speech) can present temporal regularities allowing for temporal prediction of incoming sensory information. For instance, individuals can easily predict in time the next step of a walker, or the next beat of a song based on the rhythm. The phenomenon of temporal prediction has for now only been investigated experimentally in deterministic scenarios, i.e. when the duration between two sensory events is fixed, or when stimuli present a regular beat. The objective of this project is to understand how we process more natural, hence more complex forms of temporal regularities, and how individuals make inferences on the timing of sensory events based on past temporal statistics of sensory information. This is particularly important for speech processing, considering that speech is an acoustic signal that is known to possess some form of temporal regularity, and yet is not purely rhythmic nor does have a deterministic temporal structure. Temporal regularities are specific to each spoken language, and both native and non-native language listeners are known to use temporal acoustic cues during speech listening. This affects speech comprehension and has a strong impact during language learning. Hence, understanding the processing of temporal regularities in speech can help improve language abilities in first and second language learners. The project is composed of four experiments. The first behavioral experiment will investigate how auditory perception is affected by the temporal statistics of past sensory information using artificial stimuli. The second axis will investigate the neural mechanisms underlying auditory timing processing with electroencephalography (EEG). The last Magnetoencephalography (MEG, experiment 3) and EG (rxperiement 4) experiment will test the role of temporal statistics in an ecological setting, namely speech listening. The project will thus provide strong theoretical advances as it will give new insights on brain mechanisms for the processing of complex temporal information in audition and speech, and their role in language comprehension. It will also provide methodological advances. Specifically, the project will contribute to the development and validation of cutting-edge methods in MEG. Namely, it will aim at creating new tools to investigate the neural correlates of auditory and speech processing with an unprecedented temporal and spatial resolution.
CONDITIONS
Official Title
Language and Brain Rhythms
Who Can Participate
Eligibility Criteria
You may qualify if you...
- Aged 18 to 40 years
- Registered with the French healthcare system
- Provided informed consent
- Normal hearing
- Right-handed (for experiments 2, 3, and 4)
- French as native language (for experiments 3 and 4)
You will not qualify if you...
- Neurological or psychiatric illnesses affecting data quality, cooperation, or retention
- Regular use of medications impacting the central nervous system
- Regular use of opioids, antidepressants, SSRIs, or tricyclic antidepressants
- Severe hearing loss
- History of stroke or recent head trauma
- Inability to abstain from drugs or alcohol the day or evening before sessions
- Pregnant, breastfeeding, or given birth within last 6 months
- Presence of pacemaker, insulin or other pumps, neurostimulator, cochlear implants, metal stents, prostheses, intracerebral clips, implantable defibrillator, cerebral shunt, other metal objects in upper body
- Any dental apparatus containing metal or root canals
- Any foreign metallic object in the body
- Bolts, screws, orthopedic devices or implants
- Claustrophobia (for experiments 3 and 4)
- Wearing glasses instead of contact lenses (for experiments 3 and 4)
- Head size incompatible with 3D headcast or MEG (for experiments 3 and 4)
- Prior surgery posing risk of metal objects left in the body (for experiments 3 and 4)
AI-Screening
AI-Powered Screening
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Trial Site Locations
Total: 1 location
1
Centre de Recherche en Neuroscience de Lyon
Bron, France, 69500
Actively Recruiting
Research Team
A
Anne KOSEM, PhD
CONTACT
M
Mathilde Bonnefond, PhD
CONTACT
How is the study designed?
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Masking
NONE
Allocation
NA
Model
SINGLE_GROUP
Primary Purpose
BASIC_SCIENCE
Number of Arms
1
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