Pascale Tremblay

Pascale Tremblay
  • Doctor of Philosophy
  • Professor (Full) at Université Laval

About

108
Publications
52,794
Reads
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3,606
Citations
Current institution
Université Laval
Current position
  • Professor (Full)
Education
January 2011 - October 2011
University of Trento
Field of study
  • Cognitive neuroscience, Speech sciences, Brain imaging
January 2009 - December 2011
University of Chicago
Field of study
  • Cognitive neuroscience, Speech sciences, Brain imaging, Brain stimulation
September 2002 - November 2008
McGill University
Field of study
  • Cognitive neuroscience, Speech sciences, Brain imaging, Brain stimulation

Publications

Publications (108)
Article
Full-text available
There have been wide and fundamental changes in the field of speech and language neuropsychology since the publication of Paul Broca’s (1824–1880) epoch-making work on “aphasie” (siège du langage articulé) in 1863 (Broca, 1863). This Research Topic surveys the efforts to understand the relationship between human behavior and brain function with res...
Article
Full-text available
Understanding the structural development of the neural speech network in early childhood is critical for characterizing speech acquisition. This study investigated speech in the developing brain by scanning 94 children aged 4-7 years using diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) MRI. To increase sample size and performance variability, children with atten...
Article
Full-text available
Aging is associated with alterations in resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC), which can impact executive functions such as attention and inhibitory control; however, the extent to which lifelong musical practice can influence these age-related changes remains unclear. In this paper, we investigated age-related changes in RSFC and the relati...
Article
Full-text available
It is well known that executive functions, such as attention and inhibition, decline with aging. It has been suggested that the practice of a musical activity, such as singing or playing an instrument can reduce this decline through experience-induced brain plasticity. However, little is known about the plasticity mechanisms associated with differe...
Article
Having a detailed description of the psycholinguistic properties of a language is essential for conducting well-controlled language experiments. However, there is a paucity of databases for some languages and regional varieties, including Québec French. The SyllabO+ corpus was created to provide a complete phonological and syllabic analysis of a co...
Article
Objectives The goal of this project was to investigate the impact of musical experience, hearing loss, and age on music perception in older adults. The authors hypothesized that older adults with a varying degree of musical experience would perform better at music perception tasks than their counterparts without musical experience while controlling...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) is defined as a self-reported perception of cognitive decline that occurs without clear objective signs of cognitive impairment. There is still uncertainty in the literature about the reliability of SCD as an accurate indicator of the early stages of major neurocognitive disorders. Furthermore, objectif...
Article
Full-text available
Despite the ubiquity of musical activities, little is known about the specificity of their association with executive functions. In this cross‐sectional study, we examined this relationship as a function of age. Our main hypotheses were that executive functions would decline in older age, that this relationship would be reduced in singers and instr...
Article
Full-text available
Healthy aging is associated with reduced speech perception in noise (SPiN) abilities. The etiology of these difficulties remains elusive, which prevents the development of new strategies to optimize the speech processing network and reduce these difficulties. The objective of this study was to determine if sublexical SPiN performance can be enhance...
Article
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In this essay, we review 19th century conceptions on the neurobiology of speech and language, including the pioneer work of Franz Gall, Jean-Baptiste Bouillaud, Simon Alexandre Ernest Aubertin, Marc Dax, Paul Broca, and Carl Wernicke. We examine how these early investigations, anchored in the study of neurological disorders, have broadened their sc...
Preprint
Full-text available
Characterizing the structural development of the neural speech network in early childhood is important for understanding speech acquisition. To investigate speech in the developing brain, 94 children aged 4-7-years-old at risk for early speech disorder were scanned using diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Additionall...
Article
Full-text available
Considerable debate exists about the interplay between auditory and motor speech systems. Some argue for common neural mechanisms, whereas others assert that there are few shared resources. In four experiments, we tested the hypothesis that priming the speech motor system by repeating syllable pairs aloud improves subsequent syllable discrimination...
Preprint
Research investigating the neural mechanisms of language and cognition in bilingual children is steadily growing. We reviewed fMRI and fNIRS studies to identify brain regions engaged during linguistic and cognitive tasks of bilingual compared to monolingual children. Out of 26 eligible studies, six fMRI studies were included into an exploratory coo...
Article
Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) may serve as an early indicator of Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, accurately quantifying cognitive impairment in SCD is challenging, mainly because existing assessment tools lack sensitivity. This study examined how tasks specifically designed to assess knowledge of famous people, could potentially aid in iden...
Article
Full-text available
Healthy aging is associated with extensive changes in brain structure and physiology, with impacts on cognition and communication. The “mental exercise hypothesis” proposes that certain lifestyle factors such as singing—perhaps the most universal and accessible music-making activity—can affect cognitive functioning and reduce cognitive decline in a...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose Amateur singing is a universal, accessible, and enjoyable musical activity that may have positive impacts on human communication. However, evidence of an impact of singing on speech articulation is still scarce, yet understanding the effects of vocal training on speech production could provide a model for treating people with speech deficit...
Article
Full-text available
The ability to process speech in noise (SPiN) declines with age, with a detrimental impact on life quality. Music-making activities such as singing and playing a musical instrument have raised interest as potential prevention strategies for SPiN perception decline because of their positive impact on several brain system, especially the auditory sys...
Article
The notion that lifestyle factors, such as music-making activities, can affect cognitive functioning and reduce cognitive decline in aging is often referred to as the mental exercise hypothesis. One ubiquitous musical activity is choir singing. Like other musical activities, singing is hypothesized to impact cognitive and especially executive funct...
Article
Full-text available
Objective: Although evidence has indicated that subjective cognitive decline (SCD) may be an early sign of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the objectification of cognitive impairment in SCD is challenging, mainly due to the lack of sensitivity in assessment tools. The present study investigated the potential contribution of two verbal fluency tasks with...
Article
This article reports on vowel clarity metrics based on spectrotemporal modulations of speech signals. Motivated by previous findings on the relevance of modulation-based metrics for speech intelligibility assessment and pathology classification, the current study used factor analysis to identify regions within a bi-dimensional modulation space, the...
Article
Purpose Task-independent (e.g., Ballard et al., 2003) and task-dependent models (e.g., Ziegler, 2003) differ in their predictions regarding the learning transfer from non-speech activities to speech. We argue that singing is a musical and essentially oral motor activity that differs from speech on several fundamental aspects. Building upon existing...
Article
Full-text available
Limited evidence has shown that practising musical activities in aging, such as choral singing, could lessen age-related speech perception in noise (SPiN) difficulties. However, the robustness and underlying mechanism of action of this phenomenon remain unclear. In this study, we used surface-based morphometry combined with a moderated mediation an...
Article
Voice disorders are frequent among occupational voice users such as teachers. Although these disorders can have serious personal and professional consequences, they are not often recognized as occupational diseases and little attention is paid to their prevention. This study aimed to provide a portrait of the self-reported vocal health and vocal he...
Article
Normal aging is associated with speech perception in noise (SPiN) difficulties. The objective of this study was to determine if SPiN performance can be enhanced by intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) in young and older adults. Method We developed a sub-lexical SPiN test to evaluate the contribution of age, hearing, and cognition to SPiN pe...
Article
This paper introduces an innovative functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) protocol to study real verbal interactions while limiting the impact of speech-related movement artefacts. This protocol is based on a sparse sampling acquisition technique and allowed participants to complete a referential communication task with a real interaction pa...
Article
The ability to process speech evolves over the course of the lifespan. Understanding speech at low acoustic intensity and in the presence of background noise becomes harder, and the ability for older adults to benefit from audiovisual speech also appears to decline. These difficulties can have important consequences on quality of life. Yet, a conse...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
L'intelligibilité de la parole est portée par des modulations d'amplitude évoluant en fonction du temps et de la fréquence (Rosen, 1992) où les fluctuations à cadences rapides (8-16 Hz) et lentes (1-2 Hz et 4-8 Hz) véhiculent respectivement l'information segmentale et suprasegmentale (Elliott & Theunissen, 2009). L'analyse du signal modulé a été ré...
Preprint
Full-text available
Limited evidence has shown that practising musical activities in aging, such as choral singing, could lessen age-related speech perception in noise (SPiN) difficulties. However, the robustness and underlying mechanism of action of this phenomenon remain unclear. In this study, we used surface-based morphometry combined with a moderated mediation an...
Article
Background Pain assessment and pain care are influenced by the characteristics of both the patient and the caregiver. Some studies suggest that the pain of older persons and of females may be underestimated to a greater extent than the pain of younger and male individuals. Aims This study investigated the effect of age and sex on prosocial behavio...
Article
Full-text available
The ability to perceive speech in noise (SPiN) declines with age. Although the etiology of SPiN decline is not well understood, accumulating evidence suggests a role for the dorsal speech stream. While age‐related decline within the dorsal speech stream would negatively affect SPiN performance, experience‐induced neuroplastic changes within the dor...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
We propose a new method for annotating verbal fluency data, which allows the reliable detection of the age-related decline of lexical access capacity. The main innovation is that annotators should inferentially assess the intention of the speaker when producing a word form during a verbal fluency test. Our method correlates probable speaker intenti...
Poster
Full-text available
We propose a new method for annotating verbal fluency data, which allows the reliable detection of the age-related decline of lexical access capacity. The main innovation is that annotators should inferentially assess the intention of the speaker when producing a word form during a verbal fluency test. Our method correlates probable speaker intenti...
Article
Full-text available
Speech perception can be challenging, especially for older adults. Despite the importance of speech perception in social interactions, the mechanisms underlying these difficulties remain unclear and treatment options are scarce. While several studies have suggested that decline within cortical auditory regions may be a hallmark of these difficultie...
Article
Full-text available
It has been proposed that the maintenance of phonological information in verbal working memory (vWM) is carried by a domain-specific short-term storage center—the phonological loop—which is composed of a phonological store and an articulatory rehearsal system. Several brain regions including the left posterior inferior frontal gyrus (pIFG) and ante...
Article
Full-text available
Despite decades of research, the nature of the involvement of the motor system in action language processing is still controversial, and little is known about how processing action language relates to observing, imaging and executing motor actions. This study combines a systematic review of the literature, an ALE meta-analysis and a region-of-inter...
Article
Full-text available
An impressive number of theoretical proposals and neurobiological studies argue that perceptual processing is not strictly feedforward but rather operates through an interplay between bottom-up sensory and top-down predictive mechanisms. The present EEG study aimed to further determine how prior knowledge on auditory syllables may impact speech per...
Article
Full-text available
Background and objectives: The Voice Handicap Index (VHI) is a widely recognized, self-administered questionnaire, designed to evaluate patients' perception of voice-related disability. It takes into consideration the physical, functional and emotional impacts of dysphonia. The VHI has been translated and validated in many languages, including Eur...
Article
Full-text available
Despite the huge importance of spoken language production in everyday life, little is known about the manner and extent to which the motor aspects of speech production evolve with advancing age, as well as the nature of the underlying senescence mechanisms. In this cross-sectional group study, we examined the relationship between age and speech pro...
Article
Full-text available
In this article, we used High Angular Resolution Diffusion Imaging (HARDI) with advanced anatomically constrained particle filtering tractography to investigate the role of the arcuate fasciculus (AF) and the middle longitudinal fasciculus (MdLF) in speech perception in noise in younger and older adults. Fourteen young and 15 elderly adults complet...
Preprint
Full-text available
In this review, we examine the structural connectivity of a recently-identified fiber pathway, the frontal aslant tract (FAT), and explore its function. We first review structural connectivity studies using tract-tracing methods in non-human primates, and diffusion-weighted imaging and electrostimulation in humans. These studies suggest a monosynap...
Article
Speaking requires learning to map the relationships between oral movements and the resulting acoustical signal, which demands a close interaction between perceptual and motor systems. Though historically seen as distinct, the neural mechanisms controlling speech perception and production mechanisms are now conceptualized as largely interacting and...
Article
Full-text available
Background: Melodic Intonation Therapy, a music-based intervention for the recovery of oral language production in aphasia, has been shown to be particularly effective in patients with Broca’s aphasia compared to other aphasia subtypes. It has been suggested that this therapy might improve language output by acting on motor-speech deficits often as...
Article
Full-text available
Purpose The factors that influence the evaluation of voice in adulthood, as well as the consequences of such evaluation on social interactions, are not well understood. Here, we examined the effect of listeners' age and the effect of talker age, sex, and smoking status on the auditory-perceptual evaluation of voice, voice-related psychosocial attri...
Article
The involvement of the motor system in action language comprehension is a hotly debated topic in cognitive neuroscience and psychology. Recent studies suggest that primary motor cortex (M1) response to action language is context-sensitive rather than automatic and necessary. Specifically, semantic polarity (i.e. affirmative/negative valence) appear...
Article
The literature reports that the supplementary motor area (SMA) and pre-supplementary motor area (pre-SMA) are involved in motor planning and execution, and in motor-related cognitive functions such as motor imagery. However, their specific role in action language processing remains unclear. In the present study, we investigated the impact of repeti...
Preprint
This is a chapter prepared for inclusion in the Oxford Handbook of Psycholinguistics (Eds. M.G. Gaskell & S.-A. Rueschemeyer).
Article
Full-text available
Healthy aging is associated with a decline in cognitive, executive, and motor processes that are concomitant with changes in brain activation patterns, particularly at high complexity levels. While speech production relies on all these processes, and is known to decline with age, the mechanisms that underlie these changes remain poorly understood,...
Chapter
The mental lexicon is a concept used in linguistics and in psycholinguistics to refer to a speaker’s lexical representations.
Article
Full-text available
Sublexical phonotactic regularities in language have a major impact on language development, as well as on speech processing and production throughout the entire lifespan. To understand the impact of phonotactic regularities on speech and language functions at the behavioral and neural levels, it is essential to have access to oral language corpora...
Poster
Full-text available
Objectif. L’avancée en âge est associée à un risque accru de déclin cognitif et de démence. L’amélioration des méthodes de détection précoce des atteintes cognitives associées au vieillissement est une priorité sur les plans clinique et de recherche. Le Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) est un outil utilisé pour évaluer divers domaines cognitifs...
Article
Full-text available
With the advancement of cognitive neuroscience and neuropsychological research, the field of language neurobiology is at a cross-roads with respect to its framing theories. The central thesis of this article is that the major historical framing model, the Classic “Wernicke-Lichtheim-Geschwind” model, and associated terminology, is no longer adequat...
Article
Full-text available
Objectives: To explore age differences in speech production in relation to orofacial physiology. Design: Cross-sectional quasi-experimental group study. Setting: General community. Participants: Physically and cognitively healthy volunteers recruited from the community (N = 30), including 15 young (18-39) and 15 older (66-85) adults. Measur...
Article
Objective Given that aging is associated with higher risk of cognitive decline and dementia, improving early detection of cognitive impairment has become a research and clinical priority. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is a screening instrument used to assess different aspects of cognition. Despite its widespread use, norms adjusted to th...
Article
Many factors affect our ability to decode the speech signal, including its quality, the complexity of the elements that compose it, as well as their frequency of occurrence and cooccurrence in a language. Syllable frequency effects have been described in the behavioral literature, including facilitatory effects during speech production and inhibito...
Article
Full-text available
The effects of aging on voice production are well documented, including changes in loudness, pitch, and voice quality. However, one important and clinically relevant question that remains concerns the possibility that the aging of voice can be prevented or at least delayed through noninvasive methods. Indeed, discovering natural means to preserve t...
Article
The processing of continuous and complex auditory signals such as speech relies on the ability to use statistical cues (e.g. transitional probabilities). In this study, participants heard short auditory sequences composed either of Italian syllables or bird songs and completed a regularity-rating task. Behaviorally, participants were better at diff...
Data
Cortical thickness results corrected for sex. A. Red: sensitivity to statistics controlled for age and sex. Yellow: sex effects controlled for age and sensitivity to statistics. B. Overlap between sex and statistical effects. (EPS)
Article
Full-text available
The manner and extent to which voice amplitude and frequency control mechanisms change with age is not well understood. The related question of whether the assessment of one's own voice evolves with age, concomitant with the acoustical changes that the voice undergoes, also remains unanswered. In the present study, we characterized the aging of voi...
Article
Full-text available
While there has been a growing number of studies examining the neurofunctional correlates of speech production over the past decade, the neurostructural correlates of this immensely important human behaviour remain less well understood, despite the fact that previous studies have established links between brain structure and behaviour, including sp...
Article
Full-text available
The manner and extent to which normal aging affects the ability to speak are not fully understood. While age-related changes in voice fundamental frequency and intensity have been documented, changes affecting the planning and articulation of speech are less well understood. In the present study, 76 healthy, cognitively normal participants aged bet...
Article
Long association cortical fiber pathways support developing networks for speech and language, but we do not have a clear understanding of how they develop in early childhood. Using diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) we tracked the frontal aslant tract (FAT), arcuate fasciculus (AF), and AF segments (anterior, long, posterior) in 19 typical 5-8-year-o...
Conference Paper
Full-text available
Given that aging is associated with higher risk of cognitive decline and dementia, the development of assessment tools for early detection of cognitive impairment has become a research and clinical priority. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is a screening test that is widely used in various clinical populations. It screens for different asp...
Article
Full-text available
The processing of fluent speech involves complex computational steps that begin with the segmentation of the continuous flow of speech sounds into syllables and words. One question that naturally arises pertains to the type of syllabic information that speech processes act upon. Here, we used functional magnetic resonance imaging to profile regions...
Article
Full-text available
Speech perception difficulties are common among elderlies; yet the underlying neural mechanisms are still poorly understood. New empirical evidence suggesting that brain senescence may be an important contributor to these difficulties has challenged the traditional view that peripheral hearing loss was the main factor in the etiology of these diffi...
Article
Full-text available
The field of the neurobiology of language is experiencing a paradigm shift in which the predominant Broca-Wernicke-Geschwind language model is being revised in favor of models that acknowledge that language is processed within a distributed cortical and subcortical system. While it is important to identify the brain regions that are part of this sy...
Conference Paper
Background / Purpose: This study investigates the neurobiology of the senescence mechanisms that affect the ability to produce speech in healthy older adults. We examine structural brain changes, functional brain changes, and their relationship to communicative behavior. Main conclusion: Our results demonstrate changes in the structure and fun...
Article
A number of premotor and prefrontal brain areas have been recently shown to play a significant role in response selection in overt sentence production. These areas are anatomically connected to the basal ganglia, a set of subcortical structures that has been traditionally involved in response selection across behavioral domains. The putamen and the...
Article
In addition to sensory processing, recent neurobiological models of speech perception postulate the existence of a left auditory dorsal processing stream, linking auditory speech representations in the auditory cortex with articulatory representations in the motor system, through sensorimotor interaction interfaced in the supramarginal gyrus and/or...
Article
Full-text available
The ability to perceive and produce speech undergoes important changes in late adulthood. The goal of the present study was to characterize functional and structural age-related differences in the cortical network that support speech perception and production, using magnetic resonance imaging, as well as the relationship between functional and stru...
Article
Full-text available
The growing consensus that language is distributed into large-scale cortical and subcortical networks has brought with it an increasing focus on the connectional anatomy of language, or how particular fibre pathways connect regions within the language network. Understanding connectivity of the language network could provide critical insights into f...
Article
The supratemporal plane contains several functionally heterogeneous subregions that respond strongly to speech. Much of the prior work on the issue of speech processing in the supratemporal plane has focused on neural responses to single speech vs. non-speech sounds rather than focusing on higher-level computations that are required to process more...
Article
Full-text available
Despite accumulating evidence that cortical motor areas, particularly the lateral premotor cortex, are activated during language comprehension, the question of whether motor processes help mediate the semantic encoding of language remains controversial. To address this issue, we examined whether low frequency (1 Hz) repetitive transcranial magnetic...
Article
Full-text available
Many different cortical areas are thought to be involved in the process of selecting motor responses, from the inferior frontal gyrus, to the lateral and medial parts of the premotor cortex. The objective of the present study was to examine the neural underpinnings of motor response selection in a set of overt language production tasks. To this aim...
Article
Introduction: The role of the left planum temporale (PT) in auditory language processing has been a central theme in cognitive neuroscience since the first descriptions of its leftward neuroanatomical asymmetry. While it is clear that PT contributes to auditory language processing there is still some uncertainty about its role in spoken language p...
Article
Full-text available
What is the nature of the interface between speech perception and production, where auditory and motor representations converge? One set of explanations suggests that during perception, the motor circuits involved in producing a perceived action are in some way enacting the action without actually causing movement (covert simulation) or sending alo...
Chapter
Undoubtedly, language is among the most celebrated hallmarks of human cognition. Even though we perceive, produce, and comprehend language, and do so seemingly effortlessly every day of our lives, the underlying neural mechanisms for language remain far from understood. With the cognitive revolution of the last century, it became a common viewpoint...
Article
Understanding action-related language might require some motor simulation of the action being described. Consistent with this idea, a number of functional imaging studies have shown activation in motor and premotor areas during language tasks such as passively attending to action words and phrases. In a recent fMRI study, we also showed robust acti...
Article
A controversial question in cognitive neuroscience is whether comprehension of words and sentences engages brain mechanisms specific for decoding linguistic meaning or whether language comprehension occurs through more domain-general sensorimotor processes. Accumulating behavioral and neuroimaging evidence suggests a role for cortical motor and pre...

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