How does the brain process an echo?

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Photo by Pawel Czerwinski on Unsplash
Photo by Pawel Czerwinski on Unsplash

Why don’t we hear echoes as garbled nonsense? According to Chinese researchers, the human brain separates sounds into direct speech and its echo. The team used magnetic fields to record the brain activity of 48 people listening to a story with or without an echo, and compared these signals to two computer simulations: one representing the brain adapting to the echo, and another representing the brain separating the echo from the original speech. They found participants understood the story with over 95% accuracy, and brain activity was better explained by a model that split the original speech and its echo into two separate processes, even when participants were asked to focus on a silent film rather than the audio story. 

Media release

From: PLOS

Peer-reviewed               Observational study; Simulation/modelling                People; N/A

The brain processes speech and its echo separately

Neural activity recorded while participants listened to echoic speech was best captured by a model that separates direct speech from its echo

Echoes can make speech harder to understand, and tuning out echoes in an audio recording is a notoriously difficulty engineering problem. The human brain, however, appears to solve the problem successfully by separating the sound into direct speech and its echo, according to a study publishing February 15th in the open-access journal PLOS Biology by Jiaxin Gao from Zhejiang University, China, and colleagues.

The audio signals in online meetings and auditoriums that are not properly designed often have an echo lagging at least 100 milliseconds from the original speech. These echoes heavily distort speech, interfering with slowly varying sound features most important for understanding conversations, yet people still reliably understand echoic speech. To better understand how the brain enables this, the authors used magnetoencephalography (MEG) to record neural activity while human participants listened to a story with and without an echo. They compared the neural signals to two computational models: one simulating the brain adapting to the echo, and another simulating the brain separating the echo from the original speech.

Participants understood the story with over 95% accuracy, regardless of echo. The researchers observed that cortical activity tracks energy changes related to direct speech, despite the strong interference of the echo. Simulating neural adaptation only partially captured the brain response they observed—neural activity was better explained by a model that split original speech and its echo into separate processing streams. This remained true even when participants were told to direct their attention toward a silent film and ignore the story, suggesting that top-down attention isn’t required to mentally separate direct speech and its echo. The researchers state that auditory stream segregation may be important both for singling out a specific speaker in a crowded environment, and for clearly understanding an individual speaker in a reverberant space.

The authors add, “Echoes strongly distort the sound features of speech and create a challenge for automatic speech recognition. The human brain, however, can segregate speech from its echo and achieve reliable recognition of echoic speech.”

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conference:
PLOS Biology
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Zhejiang University, China
Funder: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (https://www.nsfc.gov.cn/) (32222035 to ND) and Key R & D Program of Zhejiang (https://kjt.zj.gov.cn/) (2022C03011 to ND). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
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