Laboratoire psychologie de la perception, CNRS & Université Paris Descartes, Paris, France.
Neuron. 2010 May 27;66(4):610-8. doi: 10.1016/j.neuron.2010.04.014.
Before a natural sound can be recognized, an auditory signature of its source must be learned through experience. Here we used random waveforms to probe the formation of new memories for arbitrary complex sounds. A behavioral measure was designed, based on the detection of repetitions embedded in noises up to 4 s long. Unbeknownst to listeners, some noise samples reoccurred randomly throughout an experimental block. Results showed that repeated exposure induced learning for otherwise totally unpredictable and meaningless sounds. The learning was unsupervised and resilient to interference from other task-relevant noises. When memories were formed, they emerged rapidly, performance became abruptly near-perfect, and multiple noises were remembered for several weeks. The acoustic transformations to which recall was tolerant suggest that the learned features were local in time. We propose that rapid sensory plasticity could explain how the auditory brain creates useful memories from the ever-changing, but sometimes repeating, acoustical world.
在能够识别自然声音之前,必须通过经验来学习声音源的听觉特征。在这里,我们使用随机波形来探测任意复杂声音新记忆的形成。我们设计了一种基于检测长达 4 秒的噪声中重复出现的行为测量方法。在实验过程中,听众并不知道一些噪声样本是随机重复出现的。结果表明,重复暴露会导致对原本完全不可预测和无意义的声音产生学习。这种学习是无监督的,并且不受其他与任务相关的噪声的干扰。当形成记忆时,它们会迅速出现,性能会突然变得近乎完美,并且可以记住多个噪声数周。召回所容忍的声音转换表明,所学习的特征在时间上是局部的。我们提出,快速感觉可塑性可以解释听觉大脑如何从不断变化但有时重复的声学世界中创建有用的记忆。