Auditory Perception Clinical Trial
Official title:
Brain Activation During Simple Vocal Behaviors
This study will examine the central regions and brain activation patterns associated with
simple vocal behaviors under conditions of normal auditory feedback-when people hear
themselves speak. Such feedback plays a major role in learning and maintaining human voice
control. But voice control can be harmed by neurological injury or disease, reducing the
ability of a person to orally communicate. Research has shown that auditory feedback is
continuously monitored, brought about by both automatic and voluntary corrections in the
amplitude (loudness) and frequency of (pitch) of the human voice. This study aims to
determine which areas of the brain have activity dependent on the level of blood oxygen. It
will provide new knowledge about basic vocal motor control and provide a basis for
investigations into the integration of hearing and speaking in human vocal expression
throughout life.
Participants 18 to 45 years of age with normal hearing and voice function and with a steady
heart rate may be eligible for this study.
Participants will be evaluated by a speech-language specialist, regarding a history of voice
health and measures of voice function. They will be tested on their ability to vary voice
amplitude and frequency and tested on their hearing. Also, they will undergo an
electrocardiogram to determine their heart rate.
For the study, participants will undergo an MRI scan. During the MRI scan, patients will lie
still on a table that can slide in and out of a metal cylinder surrounded by a strong
magnetic field. Scanning time varies from 20 minutes to 3 hours, with most scans between 45
and 90 minutes. Patients may be asked to lie still for up to 90 minutes at a time. As the
scanner takes pictures, there will be loud knocking noises, and patients will wear
headphones to muffle the sound. The headphones will also enable patients to hear their
voice. The patient's head will be positioned with a coil of 25 to 30 cm diameter and
supported by a headrest. A microphone will be placed about 2 cm from the patient's mouth for
communication and collection of data. Also, an angled mirror will be attached to the head
coil, so that the patient can look outside of the scanner. By way of a projection screen,
the patient will receive a visual cue to vocalize, or use his or her voice.
Patients will be asked to repeatedly do some of the following vocalization tasks: (1) rest,
(2) hum or sigh without voicing (exhale), (3) hum or sigh audibly, (4) hum audibly while
increasing or decreasing voice frequency, and (5) hum audibly while increasing or decreasing
voice amplitude. During the scan, patients will be able to communicate with the MRI staff at
all times and may ask to be moved out of the machine at any time. Some scans may be done in
a 3 Tesla scanner. It is the latest advance in MRI, with a stronger magnetic field than in
the more common 1.5 Tesla scanner. Functional MRI is done while a person is performing
tasks, such as moving a limb or speaking. The fMRI scan will take about 1 hour.
Auditory feedback plays a uniquely prominent role in the learning and maintenance of human voice control. Yet much of what is known about central voice motor control has come from research in non-human primates during production of genetically-determined vocalizations that do not rely upon auditory feedback. Extrapolation from studies of bat echolocation suggest that midbrain networks underlie automatic audiovocal error correction in humans; however, bats and humans differ greatly in anatomical and physiology. ;
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