| Literature DB >> 24982611 |
Claudia Freigang1, Rudolf Rübsamen2, Nicole Richter2.
Abstract
From behavioral studies it is known that auditory spatial resolution of azimuthal space declines over age. To date, it is not clear how age affects the respective sensory auditory processing at the pre-attentive level. Here we tested the hypothesis that pre-attentive processing of behaviorally perceptible spatial changes is preserved in older adults. An EEG-study was performed in older adults (65-82 years of age) and a mismatch negativity (MMN) paradigm employed. Sequences of frequent standard stimuli of defined azimuthal positions were presented together with rarely occurring deviants shifted by 10° or 20° to the left or to the right of the standard. Standard positions were at +5° (central condition) from the midsagittal plane and at 65° in both lateral hemifields (±65°; lateral condition). The results suggest an effect of laterality on the pre-attentive change processing of spatial deviations in older adults: While for the central conditions deviants close to MAA threshold (i.e., 10°) yielded discernable MMNs, for lateral positions the respective MMN responses were only elicited by spatial deviations of 20° toward the midline (i.e., ±45°). Furthermore, MMN amplitudes were found to be insensitive to the magnitude of deviation (10°, 20°), which is contrary to recent studies with young adults (Bennemann et al., 2013) and hints to a deteriorated pre-attentive encoding of sound sources in older adults. The discrepancy between behavioral MAA data and present results are discussed with respect to the possibility that under the condition of active stimulus processing older adults might benefit from recruiting additional attentional top-down processes to detect small magnitudes of spatial deviations even within the lateral acoustic field.Entities:
Keywords: age-related; change detection; minimum audible angle; mismatch negativity; temporal processing
Year: 2014 PMID: 24982611 PMCID: PMC4059044 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Free-field setup with 33 loudspeakers in a semicircular array positioned between 85° to the left (−) and 85° to the right (+). Acoustic targets of defined lateral positions were established by activation of a single loudspeaker or crossfading the inputs to two neighboring speakers. Subjects were seated in the center of the semicircle with the head oriented straight and looking at a fixation cross at 0° (vertical dashed line); the interaural axis extended to the positions −90° and +90°, respectively (horizontal dashed line). In three blocks standard signals were presented at −65°, +5°, and +65°, (black loudspeaker symbols), and respective deviant signals were spatially displaced by 10° (gray loudspeaker symbols) and 20° (white loudspeaker symbols) toward the midline (dotted arrow) and the sides (solid arrow). Subjects were instructed to ignore the acoustic stimulation and to attend a muted movie with subtitles presented on a screen frontally at 0°.
Figure 2Grand averaged ERP shown for scalp electrode Fz and distribution of deviant-related activity obtained for . The spatial deviations relative to the standard positions are color-coded: blue −20° and red −10° for spatial displacements toward the midline, and green +10° and black +20° for spatial displacements toward the sides. Central stimulation: deviant positions at −15° (blue), −05° (red), +15° (green), and +25° (black). Lateral stimulation: deviant positions at ±45° (blue), ±55° (red), ±75° (green), and ±85° (black). (A) Grand averaged ERP to “deviant as deviant” (solid line) and “deviant as standard” (dashed line). (B) “Deviant as deviant”–“deviant as standard” ERP difference waves (solid lines) re-referenced to ERP signal obtained at mastoid electrodes (dashed gray lines). For the condition “central” all deviants elicited sizeable MMN responses. Deviant position −15° evoked a two-tailed MMN component, i.e., early and late MMN components within a time window of 168–188 ms and 200–220 ms, respectively (indicated by asterisks), followed by a P3a component in the time window of 285–205 ms after stimulus onset. For the condition “lateral,” only the deviant position at ±45° elicited sizeable MMN responses. (C) Scalp voltage topographies of the MMN and P3a amplitudes for respective deviant positions, significant electrodes sites were shown as red and blue circles (one-sample, one-sided t-test, p < 0.05) n = 13.
Mean MMN amplitudes and latencies for the 8 deviants measured at electrode Fz.
| −15° (toward the midline) | early −1.18 (0.46) | 178.46 (3.84) |
| late −1.13 (0.45) | 210.00 (4.15) | |
| −5° (toward the midline) | −0.89 (0.29) | 197.08 (6.40) |
| +15° (toward the sides) | −1.98 (0.46) | 192.20 (6.22) |
| +25° (toward the sides) | −2.04 (0.46) | 198.61 (4.16) |
| ±45° (toward the midline) | −1.15 (0.49) | 203.80 (6.65) |
| ±55° (toward the midline) | −0.36 (0.24) | − |
| ±75° (toward the sides) | −0.18 (0.27) | − |
| ±85° (toward the sides) | −0.18 (0.37) | − |
Mean amplitudes were calculated within ±10 ms around the peak MMN that occurred 150–250 ms after stimulus onset from grand average re-referenced ERPs. A one-sample two-sided t-test (df = 12) was calculated to test if MMN amplitudes within the time window form a distribution with the mean zero. Significant values are indicated by asterisks, with
p ≤ 0.05.
MMN amplitudes were obtained within the ±10 ms time window around the latency of the MMN peak in the re-referenced grand averages.
Individual MMN latencies measured from individual difference waves at the MMN peak amplitude.