PROJECT SUMMARY Speech communication plays a crucial role in conveying our thoughts to others, maintaining social ties, and supporting educational achievement. As a result, communication disorders that impact speech perception like autism, dyslexia, and hearing loss can be costly to both individuals and society. Understanding the neurobiological bases of speech processing is an important goal that has been hastened by invasive intracranial electrophysiology in neurosurgical contexts. Yet, substantial behavioral evidence demonstrates dynamic, flexible aspects of the mapping of speech input to phonemes that is not yet accounted for in neurobiological models. This Exploratory/Developmental R21 project pursues the central hypothesis that listening context systematically impacts cortical response to speech and therefore affects the diagnosticity of acoustic dimensions in signaling phonemes. A newly established cross-disciplinary research team will use intracerebral recording via stereoelectroencephalography (sEEG) obtained in a neurosurgical context to pursue this hypothesis. Like electrocorticography (ECoG), sEEG offers high spatiotemporal resolution and can target the cortical surface, including superior temporal gyrus (STG). Owing to the intracortical electrode placement, sEEG electrodes record through the supratemporal plane, specifically targeting both deep sulcal and gyral grey matter including superior temporal sulcus (STS) and Heschl’s gyrus (HG). Simultaneous scalp electroencephalography (EEG) will be acquired to link these intracortical measures with noninvasive approaches appropriate in studies of healthy listeners. Aim 1 will establish neural response to two acoustic-phonetic dimensions as a function of the perceptual weight with which they signal phoneme identity. This will provide a baseline response for each participant for comparison as experimental manipulations to listening context shift perceptual weights in Aim 2, and will establish how individual differences in perceptual weighting strategies predict cortical electrophysiological response. Aim 2 will introduce two well-established manipulations that, behaviorally, shift perceptual weights relative to baseline: introduction of noise and introduction of an ‘accent’ for which the short-term speech input deviates from distributional regularities of the native language. Examination of experimental manipulations within-participant will provide a sensitive means by which to assay changes in neural response as a function of changes in perceptual weights arising across listening contexts. Participants will be sampled across later adolescence (15-25 years), a period during which perceptual weights provide informative heterogeneity. The project will compound its impact by filling an important gap in understanding of speech processing, building a bridge from invasive electrophysiological studies with patients to scalp EEG measures of human listeners through combined sEEG+EEG, wedding classic ...