Gutschalk Alexander, Micheyl Christophe, Oxenham Andrew J
Department of Neurology, Ruprecht-Karls-Universität Heidelberg, Heidelberg, Germany.
PLoS Biol. 2008 Jun 10;6(6):e138. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.0060138.
Our ability to detect target sounds in complex acoustic backgrounds is often limited not by the ear's resolution, but by the brain's information-processing capacity. The neural mechanisms and loci of this "informational masking" are unknown. We combined magnetoencephalography with simultaneous behavioral measures in humans to investigate neural correlates of informational masking and auditory perceptual awareness in the auditory cortex. Cortical responses were sorted according to whether or not target sounds were detected by the listener in a complex, randomly varying multi-tone background known to produce informational masking. Detected target sounds elicited a prominent, long-latency response (50-250 ms), whereas undetected targets did not. In contrast, both detected and undetected targets produced equally robust auditory middle-latency, steady-state responses, presumably from the primary auditory cortex. These findings indicate that neural correlates of auditory awareness in informational masking emerge between early and late stages of processing within the auditory cortex.
我们在复杂声学背景中检测目标声音的能力往往并非受限于耳朵的分辨率,而是受限于大脑的信息处理能力。这种“信息掩蔽”的神经机制和位点尚不清楚。我们将脑磁图与人类同时进行的行为测量相结合,以研究听觉皮层中信息掩蔽和听觉感知意识的神经关联。根据在已知会产生信息掩蔽的复杂、随机变化的多音背景中听众是否检测到目标声音,对皮层反应进行分类。检测到的目标声音引发了一个突出的、长潜伏期反应(50 - 250毫秒),而未检测到的目标则没有。相比之下,检测到和未检测到的目标都产生了同样强烈的听觉中潜伏期稳态反应,推测来自初级听觉皮层。这些发现表明,信息掩蔽中听觉意识的神经关联出现在听觉皮层处理的早期和晚期阶段之间。