Johannes Wetekam, Nell Gotta, Luciana Lopez-Jury, Julio Hechavarria, Manfred Koessl
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We presented healthy participants with low- and high-frequency chirps in an oddball paradigm and observed significant deviance detection effects in the ABR, specifically when low-frequency chirps were used as deviants within a context of high-frequency standards. These effects manifested as larger and faster ABRs to deviant stimuli, with the strongest responses occurring at higher stimulation rates. Our findings suggest that the human IC exhibits rapid, stimulus-specific deviance detection with differential modulation of response amplitude and latency. The data indicate that the temporal dynamics of novelty detection in humans align well with the data reported in animals, helping to bridge the gap between animal and human research. 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Our findings suggest that the human IC exhibits rapid, stimulus-specific deviance detection with differential modulation of response amplitude and latency. The data indicate that the temporal dynamics of novelty detection in humans align well with the data reported in animals, helping to bridge the gap between animal and human research. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
听觉偏差检测是在重复的声学环境中识别意外刺激的神经过程,对于生存至关重要。虽然这种现象已在大脑皮层得到广泛研究,但最近的证据表明,它也发生在皮层下区域,包括下丘(IC)。然而,与动物研究相比,有关人类皮层下偏差检测的研究往往受到方法论限制,导致一些重要问题悬而未决。本研究旨在通过使用听觉脑干反应(ABRs)来研究人类偏差检测的最早神经相关性,重点是 IC,从而克服其中的一些局限性。我们在一个怪人范例中向健康参与者展示了低频和高频鸣叫,并在 ABR 中观察到了显著的偏差检测效应,特别是当低频鸣叫被用作高频标准背景下的偏差时。这些效应表现为对偏差刺激的 ABR 更大、更快,刺激频率越高,反应越强烈。我们的研究结果表明,人类集成电路表现出快速、刺激特异性的偏差检测,并对反应幅度和延迟进行不同的调节。这些数据表明,人类新奇事物检测的时间动态与动物报告的数据非常吻合,有助于缩小动物和人类研究之间的差距。通过揭示人类皮层下偏差检测以前未知的特征,这项研究强调了时间分辨率极高的 ABR 记录在研究皮层下偏差检测过程中的价值。
Rapid and Stimulus-Specific Deviance Detection in the Human Inferior Colliculus
Auditory deviance detection, the neural process by which unexpected stimuli are identified within repetitive acoustic environments, is crucial for survival. While this phenomenon has been extensively studied in the cortex, recent evidence indicates that it also occurs in subcortical regions, including the inferior colliculus (IC). However, compared to animal studies, research on subcortical deviance detection in humans is often constrained by methodological limitations, leaving several important questions unanswered. This study aims to overcome some of these limitations by employing auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) to investigate the earliest neural correlates of deviance detection in humans, with a focus on the IC. We presented healthy participants with low- and high-frequency chirps in an oddball paradigm and observed significant deviance detection effects in the ABR, specifically when low-frequency chirps were used as deviants within a context of high-frequency standards. These effects manifested as larger and faster ABRs to deviant stimuli, with the strongest responses occurring at higher stimulation rates. Our findings suggest that the human IC exhibits rapid, stimulus-specific deviance detection with differential modulation of response amplitude and latency. The data indicate that the temporal dynamics of novelty detection in humans align well with the data reported in animals, helping to bridge the gap between animal and human research. By uncovering previously unknown characteristics of subcortical deviance detection in humans, this study highlights the value of ABR recordings with excellent temporal resolution in investigating subcortical deviance detection processes.