Literature DB >> 23022431

Dissociation of formal and temporal predictability in early auditory evoked potentials.

Michael Schwartze1, Nicolas Farrugia, Sonja A Kotz.   

Abstract

Perceived regularity among events in the environment allows predictions regarding the "when" and the "what" dimensions of future events. In this context, one crucial question concerns the impact and the potentially optimizing effect, of regular temporal structure on the processing of "what", or formal, information. The current study addresses this issue by investigating whether temporal and formal structure interact during early stages of sensory processing, and by relating the respective findings to the concept of a predictive bias in brain function. Analyses were performed on two components of the auditory event-related-potential of the electroencephalogram, namely the P50 and the N100. Oddball sequences consisting of frequent standard and infrequent deviant sinusoidal tones were presented with either regular or irregular temporal structure in pre-attentive and attentive experimental settings (Schwartze, Rothermich, Schmidt-Kassow, & Kotz, 2011). Temporal regularity effects on pre-attentive and attentive processing of deviance. Biological Psychology, 87, 146-151). The results confirm that the P50 and the N100 amplitudes reliably encode formal and temporal predictability. Similar patterns of results obtained with pre-attentive and attentive task instructions, as well as the absence of a significant interaction of formal and temporal structure suggest that the P50 response may be interpreted as an automatic marker of predictability, whereas the N100 may represent a more complex marker, in which formal and temporal structure start interacting as a function of attention.
Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 23022431     DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2012.09.037

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropsychologia        ISSN: 0028-3932            Impact factor:   3.139


  19 in total

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8.  Temporal attending and prediction influence the perception of metrical rhythm: evidence from reaction times and ERPs.

Authors:  Fleur L Bouwer; Henkjan Honing
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9.  Implicit learning of predictable sound sequences modulates human brain responses at different levels of the auditory hierarchy.

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10.  Expectancy-based rhythmic entrainment as continuous Bayesian inference.

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