Keyword search (4,163 papers available)

"Coffey EBJ" Authored Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Nightly variations in sleep quality and next-day cognitive performance: an in-home study in healthy older adults Brooks M; El Chami R; Jourde HR; Savard MA; Coffey EBJ; 41878310
PSYCHOLOGY
2 Modulating sleep: slow oscillation and spindle stimulation effects on physiology and memory Jourde HR; Sita KZ; Eyqvelle Z; Brooks M; Coffey EBJ; 41559130
CONCORDIA
3 The effectiveness of auditory stimulation in sleep varies with thalamocortical spindle phase Jourde HR; Ujevco A; Coffey EBJ; 41110657
CONCORDIA
4 Exploring Deep Magnetoencephalography via Thalamo-Cortical Sleep Spindles Rattray GF; Jourde HR; Baillet S; Coffey EBJ; 41002111
PSYCHOLOGY
5 Sleep state influences early sound encoding at cortical but not subcortical levels Jourde HR; Coffey EBJ; 40623839
PSYCHOLOGY
6 Neurophysiological effects of targeting sleep spindles with closed-loop auditory stimulation Jourde HR; Sobral M; Beltrame G; Coffey EBJ; 40626105
PSYCHOLOGY
7 Personalizing brain stimulation: continual learning for sleep spindle detection Sobral M; Jourde HR; Marjani Bajestani SE; Coffey EBJ; Beltrame G; 40609549
PSYCHOLOGY
8 Sound degradation type differentially affects neural indicators of cognitive workload and speech tracking Gagné N; Greenlaw KM; Coffey EBJ; 40412301
PSYCHOLOGY
9 Auditory working memory mechanisms mediating the relationship between musicianship and auditory stream segregation Liu M; Arseneau-Bruneau I; Farrés Franch M; Latorre ME; Samuels J; Issa E; Payumo A; Rahman N; Loureiro N; Leung TCM; Nave KM; von Handorf KM; Hoddinott JD; Coffey EBJ; Grahn J; Zatorre RJ; 40226491
PSYCHOLOGY
10 Toward cognitive models of misophonia Savard MA; Coffey EBJ; 39874936
PSYCHOLOGY
11 Auditory processing up to cortex is maintained during sleep spindles Jourde HR; Coffey EBJ; 39588317
PSYCHOLOGY
12 Challenges and Approaches in the Study of Neural Entrainment Duecker K; Doelling KB; Breska A; Coffey EBJ; Sivarao DV; Zoefel B; 39358026
CONCORDIA
13 Cortical-subcortical interactions underlie processing of auditory predictions measured with 7T fMRI Ara A; Provias V; Sitek K; Coffey EBJ; Zatorre RJ; 39087881
PSYCHOLOGY
14 Approaches to studying emotion using physiological responses to spoken narratives: A scoping review Savard MA; Merlo R; Samithamby A; Paas A; Coffey EBJ; 38961524
PSYCHOLOGY
15 Overcoming boundaries: Interdisciplinary challenges and opportunities in cognitive neuroscience Brignol A; Paas A; Sotelo-Castro L; St-Onge D; Beltrame G; Coffey EBJ; 38750788
PSYCHOLOGY
16 The neurophysiology of closed-loop auditory stimulation in sleep: A magnetoencephalography study Jourde HR; Merlo R; Brooks M; Rowe M; Coffey EBJ; 37675803
CONCORDIA
17 Decoding of Envelope vs. Fundamental Frequency During Complex Auditory Stream Segregation Greenlaw KM; Puschmann S; Coffey EBJ; 37215227
PSYCHOLOGY
18 The Portiloop: A deep learning-based open science tool for closed-loop brain stimulation Valenchon N; Bouteiller Y; Jourde HR; L' Heureux X; Sobral M; Coffey EBJ; Beltrame G; 35994482
CONCORDIA
19 Sleep affects higher-level categorization of speech sounds, but not frequency encoding Chapelle A; Savard MA; Restani R; Ghaemmaghami P; Thillou N; Zardoui K; Chandrasekaran B; Coffey EBJ; 35732089
PSYCHOLOGY
20 Sigma oscillations protect or reinstate motor memory depending on their temporal coordination with slow waves Nicolas J; King BR; Levesque D; Lazzouni L; Coffey EBJ; Swinnen S; Doyon J; Carrier J; Albouy G; 35726850
PSYCHOLOGY
21 Specificity of Affective Responses in Misophonia Depends on Trigger Identification Savard MA; Sares AG; Coffey EBJ; Deroche MLD; 35692416
PSYCHOLOGY
22 Evolving perspectives on the sources of the frequency-following response. Coffey EBJ, Nicol T, White-Schwoch T, Chandrasekaran B, Krizman J, Skoe E, Zatorre RJ, Kraus N 31695046
PSYCHOLOGY
23 Expedition Cognition: A Review and Prospective of Subterranean Neuroscience With Spaceflight Applications. Mogilever NB, Zuccarelli L, Burles F, Iaria G, Strapazzon G, Bessone L, Coffey EBJ 30425628
PSYCHOLOGY
24 The Music-In-Noise Task (MINT): A Tool for Dissecting Complex Auditory Perception. Coffey EBJ, Arseneau-Bruneau I, Zhang X, Zatorre RJ 30930734
PSYCHOLOGY

 

Title:Decoding of Envelope vs. Fundamental Frequency During Complex Auditory Stream Segregation
Authors:Greenlaw KMPuschmann SCoffey EBJ
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37215227/
DOI:10.1162/nol_a_00013
Publication:Neurobiology of language (Cambridge, Mass.)
Keywords:auditory stream segregationhearing-in-noiseneural decodingpitch representationreconstructionspeech-in-noise
PMID:37215227 Category: Date Added:2023-05-22
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY

Description:

Hearing-in-noise perception is a challenging task that is critical to human function, but how the brain accomplishes it is not well understood. A candidate mechanism proposes that the neural representation of an attended auditory stream is enhanced relative to background sound via a combination of bottom-up and top-down mechanisms. To date, few studies have compared neural representation and its task-related enhancement across frequency bands that carry different auditory information, such as a sound's amplitude envelope (i.e., syllabic rate or rhythm; 1-9 Hz), and the fundamental frequency of periodic stimuli (i.e., pitch; >40 Hz). Furthermore, hearing-in-noise in the real world is frequently both messier and richer than the majority of tasks used in its study. In the present study, we use continuous sound excerpts that simultaneously offer predictive, visual, and spatial cues to help listeners separate the target from four acoustically similar simultaneously presented sound streams. We show that while both lower and higher frequency information about the entire sound stream is represented in the brain's response, the to-be-attended sound stream is strongly enhanced only in the slower, lower frequency sound representations. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that attended sound representations are strengthened progressively at higher level, later processing stages, and that the interaction of multiple brain systems can aid in this process. Our findings contribute to our understanding of auditory stream separation in difficult, naturalistic listening conditions and demonstrate that pitch and envelope information can be decoded from single-channel EEG data.





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