Early indices of deviance detection in humans and animal models.


Por: Grimm S, Escera C and Nelken I

Publicada: 1 abr 2016 Ahead of Print: 2 dic 2015
Resumen:
Detecting unexpected stimuli in the environment is a critical function of the auditory system. Responses to unexpected "deviant" sounds are enhanced compared to responses to expected stimuli. At the human scalp, deviance detection is reflected in the mismatch negativity (MMN) and in an enhancement of the middle-latency response (MLR). Single neurons often respond more strongly to a stimulus when rare than when common, a phenomenon termed stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA). Here we compare stimulus-specific adaptation with scalp-recorded deviance-related responses. We conclude that early markers of deviance detection in the time range of the MLR could be a direct correlate of cortical SSA. Both occur at an early level of cortical activation, both are robust findings with low-probability stimuli, and both show properties of genuine deviance detection. Their causal relation with the later scalp-recorded MMN is a key question in this field.
ISSN: 03010511





BIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
Editorial
Elsevier BV, Netherlands, Países Bajos
Tipo de documento: Article
Volumen: 116 Número:
Páginas: 23-27
WOS Id: 000373110100004
ID de PubMed: 26656286

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