Literature DB >> 21368107

Attention-driven auditory cortex short-term plasticity helps segregate relevant sounds from noise.

Jyrki Ahveninen1, Matti Hämäläinen, Iiro P Jääskeläinen, Seppo P Ahlfors, Samantha Huang, Fa-Hsuan Lin, Tommi Raij, Mikko Sams, Christos E Vasios, John W Belliveau.   

Abstract

How can we concentrate on relevant sounds in noisy environments? A "gain model" suggests that auditory attention simply amplifies relevant and suppresses irrelevant afferent inputs. However, it is unclear whether this suffices when attended and ignored features overlap to stimulate the same neuronal receptive fields. A "tuning model" suggests that, in addition to gain, attention modulates feature selectivity of auditory neurons. We recorded magnetoencephalography, EEG, and functional MRI (fMRI) while subjects attended to tones delivered to one ear and ignored opposite-ear inputs. The attended ear was switched every 30 s to quantify how quickly the effects evolve. To produce overlapping inputs, the tones were presented alone vs. during white-noise masking notch-filtered ±1/6 octaves around the tone center frequencies. Amplitude modulation (39 vs. 41 Hz in opposite ears) was applied for "frequency tagging" of attention effects on maskers. Noise masking reduced early (50-150 ms; N1) auditory responses to unattended tones. In support of the tuning model, selective attention canceled out this attenuating effect but did not modulate the gain of 50-150 ms activity to nonmasked tones or steady-state responses to the maskers themselves. These tuning effects originated at nonprimary auditory cortices, purportedly occupied by neurons that, without attention, have wider frequency tuning than ±1/6 octaves. The attentional tuning evolved rapidly, during the first few seconds after attention switching, and correlated with behavioral discrimination performance. In conclusion, a simple gain model alone cannot explain auditory selective attention. In nonprimary auditory cortices, attention-driven short-term plasticity retunes neurons to segregate relevant sounds from noise.

Mesh:

Year:  2011        PMID: 21368107      PMCID: PMC3053977          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1016134108

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   11.205


  50 in total

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Review 4.  Short-term plasticity in auditory cognition.

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5.  The advantage of combining MEG and EEG: comparison to fMRI in focally stimulated visual cortex.

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  50 in total

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Review 7.  Short-term plasticity as a neural mechanism supporting memory and attentional functions.

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8.  Intracortical depth analyses of frequency-sensitive regions of human auditory cortex using 7TfMRI.

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