Literature DB >> 21147987

Stimulus-specific adaptation in auditory cortex is an NMDA-independent process distinct from the sensory novelty encoded by the mismatch negativity.

Brandon J Farley1, Michael C Quirk, James J Doherty, Edward P Christian.   

Abstract

The significance of the mismatch negativity (MMN), an event-related potential measured in humans which indexes novelty in the auditory environment, has motivated a search for a cellular correlate of this process. A leading candidate is stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA) in auditory cortex units, which shares several characteristics with the MMN. Whether auditory cortex responses encode sensory novelty, a defining property of the MMN, however, has not been resolved. To evaluate this key issue, we used several variations of the auditory oddball paradigm from the human literature and examined psychophysical and pharmacological properties of multiunit activity in the auditory cortex of awake rodents. We found converging evidence dissociating SSA from sensory novelty and the MMN. First, during an oddball paradigm with frequency deviants, neuronal responses showed clear SSA but failed to encode novelty in a manner analogous to the human MMN. Second, oddball paradigms using intensity or duration deviants revealed a pattern of unit responses that showed sensory adaptation, but again without any measurable novelty correlates aligning to the human MMN. Finally NMDA antagonists, which are known to disrupt the MMN, suppressed the magnitude of multiunit responses in a nonspecific manner, leaving the process of SSA intact. Together, our results suggest that auditory novelty detection as indexed by the MMN is dissociable from SSA at the level of activity encoded by auditory cortex neurons. Further, the NMDA sensitivity reported for the MMN, which models the disruption of MMN observed in schizophrenia, may occur at a mechanistic locus outside of SSA.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21147987      PMCID: PMC6634869          DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2793-10.2010

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurosci        ISSN: 0270-6474            Impact factor:   6.167


  64 in total

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Authors:  Shai Netser; Yael Zahar; Yoram Gutfreund
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-12-07       Impact factor: 6.167

2.  Somatostatin Interneurons Control a Key Component of Mismatch Negativity in Mouse Visual Cortex.

Authors:  Jordan P Hamm; Rafael Yuste
Journal:  Cell Rep       Date:  2016-07-07       Impact factor: 9.423

3.  Prior expectation mediates neural adaptation to repeated sounds in the auditory cortex: an MEG study.

Authors:  Ana Todorovic; Freek van Ede; Eric Maris; Floris P de Lange
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2011-06-22       Impact factor: 6.167

4.  A Comparison of Auditory Oddball Responses in Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex, Basolateral Amygdala, and Auditory Cortex of Macaque.

Authors:  Corrie R Camalier; Kaylee Scarim; Mortimer Mishkin; Bruno B Averbeck
Journal:  J Cogn Neurosci       Date:  2019-03-18       Impact factor: 3.225

5.  Modeling ketamine effects on synaptic plasticity during the mismatch negativity.

Authors:  André Schmidt; Andreea O Diaconescu; Michael Kometer; Karl J Friston; Klaas E Stephan; Franz X Vollenweider
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2012-08-08       Impact factor: 5.357

6.  Encoding of nested levels of acoustic regularity in hierarchically organized areas of the human auditory cortex.

Authors:  Marc Recasens; Sabine Grimm; Andreas Wollbrink; Christo Pantev; Carles Escera
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2014-07-04       Impact factor: 5.038

7.  Adaptation of high-gamma responses in human auditory association cortex.

Authors:  Steven J Eliades; Nathan E Crone; William S Anderson; Deepti Ramadoss; Frederick A Lenz; Dana Boatman-Reich
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2014-08-13       Impact factor: 2.714

8.  Intracellular correlates of stimulus-specific adaptation.

Authors:  Itai Hershenhoren; Nevo Taaseh; Flora M Antunes; Israel Nelken
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2014-02-26       Impact factor: 6.167

9.  Auditory responses and stimulus-specific adaptation in rat auditory cortex are preserved across NREM and REM sleep.

Authors:  Yuval Nir; Vladyslav V Vyazovskiy; Chiara Cirelli; Matthew I Banks; Giulio Tononi
Journal:  Cereb Cortex       Date:  2013-12-08       Impact factor: 5.357

10.  Deviance detection is the dominant component of auditory contextual processing in the lateral superior temporal gyrus: A human ECoG study.

Authors:  Yohei Ishishita; Naoto Kunii; Seijiro Shimada; Kenji Ibayashi; Mariko Tada; Kenji Kirihara; Kensuke Kawai; Takanori Uka; Kiyoto Kasai; Nobuhito Saito
Journal:  Hum Brain Mapp       Date:  2018-10-24       Impact factor: 5.038

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