bioRxiv preprint

Distinct yet neighboring neural populations encode past, future, and surrounding speech context in the human temporal lobe

Context is critical for both human and artificial speech comprehension systems. While the role of preceding context in speech processing has been well documented, the neural mechanisms supporting the integration of subsequent input -- phonemes and words that occur in the future -- remain poorly understood. Here, we leverage advances in artificial speech systems to model the contribution of different sources of context on the neural encoding of speech in the human brain. For neural encoding, context-informed but not context-uninformed speech model embeddings explain unique variance in human neural activity beyond acoustics, including in early speech processing regions. In particular, model em

neuroscience