Unveiling the development of human voice perception: Neurobiological mechanisms and pathophysiology

The human voice is a critical stimulus for the auditory system that promotes social connection, informs the listener about identity and emotion, and acts as the carrier for spoken language. Research on voice processing in adults has informed our understanding of the unique status of the human voice...

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Veröffentlicht in:Current research in neurobiology 2024-01, Vol.6, p.100127, Article 100127
Hauptverfasser: Harford, Emily E., Holt, Lori L., Abel, Taylor J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The human voice is a critical stimulus for the auditory system that promotes social connection, informs the listener about identity and emotion, and acts as the carrier for spoken language. Research on voice processing in adults has informed our understanding of the unique status of the human voice in the mature auditory cortex and provided potential explanations for mechanisms that underly voice selectivity and identity processing. There is evidence that voice perception undergoes developmental change starting in infancy and extending through early adolescence. While even young infants recognize the voice of their mother, there is an apparent protracted course of development to reach adult-like selectivity for human voice over other sound categories and recognition of other talkers by voice. Gaps in the literature do not allow for an exact mapping of this trajectory or an adequate description of how voice processing and its neural underpinnings abilities evolve. This review provides a comprehensive account of developmental voice processing research published to date and discusses how this evidence fits with and contributes to current theoretical models proposed in the adult literature. We discuss how factors such as cognitive development, neural plasticity, perceptual narrowing, and language acquisition may contribute to the development of voice processing and its investigation in children. We also review evidence of voice processing abilities in premature birth, autism spectrum disorder, and phonagnosia to examine where and how deviations from the typical trajectory of development may manifest. [Display omitted] •Voice perception undergoes apparent developmental change in the first years of life.•Models of voice processing from adult studies are largely untested in children.•Perceptual tuning and language acquisition may modulate development.•Abnormalities in pathophysiology may inform models of typical voice processing.•Further research with children is needed to define the trajectory of development.
ISSN:2665-945X
2665-945X
DOI:10.1016/j.crneur.2024.100127