Literature DB >> 11850086

Sound complexity and 'speechness' effects on pre-attentive auditory discrimination in children.

Rita Ceponiene1, Kiyoshi Yaguchi, Anna Shestakova, Paavo Alku, Kalervo Suominen, Risto Näätänen.   

Abstract

The evidence in adults suggests that at a cortical level simple and complex sounds are processed by partly divergent subsystems. In children, central processing of sounds differing in complexity has not been investigated. Therefore, the present study examined preconscious discrimination of the differences in sound frequency and duration as a function of sound complexity in 8-10-year-old children. A mismatch negativity (MMN) component of auditory event-related potentials was elicited in a paradigm where 'deviant' (rare) stimuli were either shorter in duration or higher in frequency than the 'standard' (repetitive) sounds. Vowels and vowel-matched complex and simple tones were presented in separate sequences. The stimulus complexity effects were sizable and appeared as larger areas and shorter and more consistent latencies of the MMNs, elicited by more complex stimuli. In addition, the vowel frequency MMN showed left hemisphere preponderance compared to the complex tone frequency MMN. No such effect was found for the duration decrement MMNs. In addition, the complex tone duration decrement MMN was distributed posteriorly to either the vowel or sinusoidal tone MMNs. A late discriminative negativity, LDN, did not show consistent effects of sound complexity. In conclusion, acoustically rich sound content facilitates auditory sensory discrimination in 8-10-year-old children. The sound 'speechness' effects were not as robust though present. Unlike adults, children demonstrated high intersubject variability in discriminating spectrally poor, but not rich, sounds. The discrimination of the sound duration appears to differ from that of the sound frequency in nature and, consequently, in the neural substrates.

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Year:  2002        PMID: 11850086     DOI: 10.1016/s0167-8760(01)00172-6

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Psychophysiol        ISSN: 0167-8760            Impact factor:   2.997


  10 in total

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Authors:  Nina Neuhoff; Jennifer Bruder; Jürgen Bartling; Andreas Warnke; Helmut Remschmidt; Bertram Müller-Myhsok; Gerd Schulte-Körne
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3.  Effects of Presentation Rate and Attention on Auditory Discrimination: A Comparison of Long-Latency Auditory Evoked Potentials in School-Aged Children and Adults.

Authors:  Naseem A Choudhury; Jessica A Parascando; April A Benasich
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4.  Developmental changes in mismatch responses to mandarin consonants and lexical tones from early to middle childhood.

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5.  Extracting Phonetic Features From Natural Classes: A Mismatch Negativity Study of Mandarin Chinese Retroflex Consonants.

Authors:  Zhanao Fu; Philip J Monahan
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6.  Mismatch response to polysyllabic nonwords: a neurophysiological signature of language learning capacity.

Authors:  Johanna G Barry; Mervyn J Hardiman; Dorothy V M Bishop
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8.  Event-related potentials to an english/spanish syllabic contrast in mexican 10-13-month-old infants.

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Review 9.  Separating acoustic deviance from novelty during the first year of life: a review of event-related potential evidence.

Authors:  Elena V Kushnerenko; Bea R H Van den Bergh; István Winkler
Journal:  Front Psychol       Date:  2013-09-05

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  10 in total

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