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反复听闻:人类在线下皮质的可塑性。

Hearing it again and again: on-line subcortical plasticity in humans.

机构信息

Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois, United States of America.

出版信息

PLoS One. 2010 Oct 26;5(10):e13645. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0013645.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Human brainstem activity is sensitive to local sound statistics, as reflected in an enhanced response in repetitive compared to pseudo-random stimulus conditions [1]. Here we probed the short-term time course of this enhancement using a paradigm that assessed how the local sound statistics (i.e., repetition within a five-note melody) interact with more global statistics (i.e., repetition of the melody).

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: To test the hypothesis that subcortical repetition enhancement builds over time, we recorded auditory brainstem responses in young adults to a five-note melody containing a repeated note, and monitored how the response changed over the course of 1.5 hrs. By comparing response amplitudes over time, we found a robust time-dependent enhancement to the locally repeating note that was superimposed on a weaker enhancement of the globally repeating pattern.

CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: We provide the first demonstration of on-line subcortical plasticity in humans. This complements previous findings that experience-dependent subcortical plasticity can occur on a number of time scales, including life-long experiences with music and language, and short-term auditory training. Our results suggest that the incoming stimulus stream is constantly being monitored, even when the stimulus is physically invariant and attention is directed elsewhere, to augment the neural response to the most statistically salient features of the ongoing stimulus stream. These real-time transformations, which may subserve humans' strong disposition for grouping auditory objects, likely reflect a mix of local processes and corticofugal modulation arising from statistical regularities and the influences of expectation. Our results contribute to our understanding of the biological basis of statistical learning and initiate a new investigational approach relating to the time-course of subcortical plasticity. Although the reported time-dependent enhancements are believed to reflect universal neurophysiological processes, future experiments utilizing a larger array of stimuli are needed to establish the generalizability of our findings.

摘要

背景

人类脑干活动对局部声音统计数据敏感,这反映在重复刺激条件下的反应增强,而不是伪随机刺激条件下[1]。在这里,我们使用一种评估局部声音统计数据(即五音符旋律中的重复)与更全局统计数据(即旋律的重复)之间相互作用的范式来探测这种增强的短期时间过程。

方法/主要发现:为了检验亚皮质重复增强随时间建立的假设,我们记录了年轻成年人对包含重复音符的五音符旋律的听觉脑干反应,并监测了反应在 1.5 小时内的变化。通过比较随时间变化的反应幅度,我们发现对局部重复音符的增强具有强大的时间依赖性,这种增强叠加在对全局重复模式的较弱增强上。

结论/意义:我们首次在人类中证明了皮质下的在线可塑性。这补充了先前的发现,即皮质下的经验依赖性可塑性可以在多个时间尺度上发生,包括与音乐和语言有关的终身经验,以及短期听觉训练。我们的结果表明,即使刺激是物理不变的,注意力指向其他地方,传入的刺激流也在不断被监测,以增强对正在进行的刺激流中最显著统计特征的神经反应。这些实时转换可能反映了局部过程和来自统计规律和期望影响的皮质下调制的混合,这些转换可能反映了局部过程和来自统计规律和期望影响的皮质下调制的混合,可能反映了人类对听觉对象进行分组的强烈倾向的基础。我们的结果有助于我们理解统计学习的生物学基础,并开创了一种与皮质下可塑性时间过程相关的新研究方法。虽然报告的时间依赖性增强被认为反映了普遍的神经生理过程,但需要利用更多的刺激来进行未来的实验,以确定我们发现的普遍性。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/6ec2/2964325/b4abc26dae0e/pone.0013645.g001.jpg

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