New research shows brain鈥檚 predictive nature when listening to others

Our brain activity is more similar to that of speakers we are listening to when we can predict what they are going to say, a team of neuroscientists has found. The study, which appears in the , provides fresh evidence on the brain鈥檚 role in communication. Dr (New York 木瓜福利影视 and Utrecht 木瓜福利影视) is the study鈥檚 lead author.

鈥淥ur findings show that the brains of both speakers and listeners take language predictability into account, resulting in more similar brain activity patterns between the two,鈥 says Suzanne Dikker (New York 木瓜福利影视, Department of Psychology / Utrecht 木瓜福利影视, Utrecht Institute of Linguistics OTS). 鈥淐rucially, this happens even before a sentence is spoken and heard.鈥

Brain as prediction machine

In recent years, many neuroscientists have come to see the brain as a 鈥榩rediction machine鈥: we are constantly anticipating events in the world around us so that we can respond to them quickly and accurately. Rather than processing sounds, putting them into words and then words into sentences, we can predict words and sounds based on context鈥攁nd our brain takes advantage of this. For instance, when we hear 鈥淕rass is鈥︹ we can easily predict 鈥済reen.鈥 What鈥檚 less understood is how this predictability might affect the speaker鈥檚 brain, or even the interaction between speakers and listeners.

Experiment: describing images

In the Journal of Neuroscience study, the researchers collected brain responses from a speaker while she described images that she had viewed. These images varied in terms of likely predictability for a specific description. Then, another group of subjects listened to those descriptions while viewing the same images. During this period, the researchers monitored the subjects鈥 brain activity. When listeners can predict what a speaker is going to say, the authors suggest, their brains take advantage of this by sending a signal to their auditory cortex that it can expect sound patterns corresponding to predicted words (e.g., 鈥済reen鈥 while hearing 鈥済rass is...鈥). Interestingly, they add, the speaker's brain is showing a similar effect as she is planning what she will say: brain activity in her auditory language areas is affected by how predictable her utterance will be for her listeners.

Impact of predictive power of the brain on communication

鈥淚n addition to facilitating rapid and accurate processing of the world around us, the predictive power of our brains might play an important role in human communication,鈥 notes Dikker. 鈥淒uring conversation, we adapt our speech rate and word choices to each other鈥攆or example, when explaining science to a child as opposed to a fellow scientist鈥攁nd these processes are governed by our brains, which correspondingly align to each other.鈥 Dikker conducted this study as part of her research funded by a Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Innovation Scheme .

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