| Literature DB >> 21852979 |
Jana Timm1, Annekathrin Weise, Sabine Grimm, Erich Schröger.
Abstract
The infrequent occurrence of a transient feature (deviance; e.g., frequency modulation, FM) in one of the regular occurring sinusoidal tones (standards) elicits the deviance related mismatch negativity (MMN) component of the event-related brain potential. Based on a memory-based comparison, MMN reflects the mismatch between the representations of incoming and standard sounds. The present study investigated to what extent the infrequent exclusion of an FM is detected by the MMN system. For that purpose we measured MMN to deviances that either consisted of the exclusion or inclusion of an FM at an early or late position within the sound that was present or absent, respectively, in the standard. According to the information-content hypothesis, deviance detection relies on the difference in informational content of the deviant relative to that of the standard. As this difference between deviants with FM and standards without FM is the same as in the reversed case, comparable MMNs should be elicited to FM inclusions and exclusions. According to the feature-detector hypothesis, however, the deviance detection depends on the increased activation of feature detectors to additional sound features. Thus, rare exclusions of the FM should elicit no or smaller MMN than FM inclusions. In passive listening condition, MMN was obtained only for the early inclusion, but not for the exclusions nor for the late inclusion of an FM. This asymmetry in automatic deviance detection seems to partly reflect the contribution of feature detectors even though it cannot fully account for the missing MMN to late FM inclusions. Importantly, the behavioral deviance detection performance in the active listening condition did not reveal such an asymmetry, suggesting that the intentional detection of the deviants is based on the difference in informational content. On a more general level, the results partly support the "fresh-afferent" account or an extended memory-comparison based account of MMN.Entities:
Keywords: automatic deviance detection; event-related brain potentials; feature inclusion/exclusion; mismatch negativity
Year: 2011 PMID: 21852979 PMCID: PMC3151575 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2011.00189
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychol ISSN: 1664-1078
Mean MMN amplitudes measured at Fz for the conditions .
| Condition | Window in ms | Amplitude in μV (SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Missing FM early | 238–278 | −0.17 (0.67) | −0.80 n.s. |
| Missing FM late | 511–551 | −0.18 (1.13) | −0.58 n.s. |
| FM early | 238–278 | −1.47 (1.42) | −3.73** |
| FM late | 511–551 | −0.34 (0.88) | −1.38 n.s. |
To verify the presence of MMN, one-sample Student's t-tests (see ≤ 0.001, n.s. non-significant). SD are given in parentheses. (df = degrees of freedom).
Figure 1Grand-average ERP waves (at Fz and RM), elicited by deviant sounds (black dotted line) and by physical identical control sounds (black solid line), separately for the conditions . The corresponding deviant-minus-control difference wave is depicted (blue line for Missing FM early, Missing FM late conditions, red line for FM early, FM late conditions). Deviant sounds used in each condition are displayed schematically at the bottom of the diagrams. Triangles indicate the FM inclusion, dashed quadrangles indicate the FM exclusion. Arrows point to the MMN latency range.
Figure 2Topographical distribution of absolute MMN voltages for the .
Behavioral data obtained in the deviant detection task for the conditions .
| Condition | Hits in % (SD) | False alarms in % (SD) | Reaction times in ms (SD) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Missing FM early | 90.33 (12.34) | 1.50 (1.58) | 512 (84) | 3.90 (1.03) |
| Missing FM late | 78.52 (11.29) | 1.67 (1.93) | 518 (84) | 3.16 (0.69) |
| FM early | 92.03 (7.59) | 0.42 (0.44) | 446 (82) | 4.35 (0.48) |
| FM late | 91.65 (11.46) | 0.59 (0.49) | 442 (79) | 4.31 (0.82) |
SD are given in parentheses.
Figure 3Illustration of mean . An error bar displays the SD. Differences between conditions were tested using pairwise comparison.
Figure 4Illustration of mean RTs (in ms) for the conditions . An error bar displays the SD. Differences between conditions were tested using pairwise comparisons.