Sebastian Andric

Graduate Student
McGill Univ
Email author

Dynamics of Pupil and Neural Responses to Contextual Speech Predictions

Sebastian Andric, Peter Donhauser, Sylvain Baillet

I am a M.Sc. student in the Integrated Program of Neuroscience at McGill University. I completed my B.Sc. in Neuroscience at McGill as a undergraduate researcher with the Sequence Production Lab. Here I was investigating the influence of circadian rhythms on spontaneous production rates during musical performance. Currently, I am at the NeuroSPEED lab in the Montreal Neurological Institute studying contextual speech predictions and how they are related to brain and autonomic signals.

Dynamics of Pupil and Neural Responses to Contextual Speech Predictions

Sebastian Andric, Peter Donhauser, Sylvain Baillet
Abstract

Incoming raw sensory content is diverse and dynamic, posing a challenging computational problem for brain processing. Internal representations of sensory contexts may alleviate this processing; these models suggest that the gain of incoming information depends on whether stimuli are expected or unexpected. Mechanistically, this is referred to as predictive coding. Predictive processing manifests in various physiological contexts. For example, increases in pupil diameter during surprising events is hypothesized to modulate the gain on unexpected stimuli, and hierarchically organized neural oscillations are thought to mediate top-down relaying of predictive information. Here, the roll of physiological dynamics in the pupil and brain in response to contextual speech predictions are investigated. A neural network model was trained on human speech to generate speech prediction parameters as a proxy for auditory processing. The dynamics of physiological responses were modeled using speech features and prediction parameters in order to determine the timescale of their dynamics. Pupil responses showed increased diameter during highly surprising events, and neural activity was better predicted at varying timescales depending on the cortical region's position in the processing hierarchy.