Gockel Hedwig E, Krugliak Alexandra, Plack Christopher J, Carlyon Robert P
MRC-Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, 15 Chaucer Road, Cambridge, CB2 7EF, UK.
School of Psychological Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester Academic Health Science Centre, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2015 Dec;16(6):747-62. doi: 10.1007/s10162-015-0533-9. Epub 2015 Jul 11.
The frequency following response (FFR) is a scalp-recorded measure of phase-locked brainstem activity to stimulus-related periodicities. Three experiments investigated the specificity of the FFR for carrier and modulation frequency using adaptation. FFR waveforms evoked by alternating-polarity stimuli were averaged for each polarity and added, to enhance envelope, or subtracted, to enhance temporal fine structure information. The first experiment investigated peristimulus adaptation of the FFR for pure and complex tones as a function of stimulus frequency and fundamental frequency (F0). It showed more adaptation of the FFR in response to sounds with higher frequencies or F0s than to sounds with lower frequency or F0s. The second experiment investigated tuning to modulation rate in the FFR. The FFR to a complex tone with a modulation rate of 213 Hz was not reduced more by an adaptor that had the same modulation rate than by an adaptor with a different modulation rate (90 or 504 Hz), thus providing no evidence that the FFR originates mainly from neurons that respond selectively to the modulation rate of the stimulus. The third experiment investigated tuning to audio frequency in the FFR using pure tones. An adaptor that had the same frequency as the target (213 or 504 Hz) did not generally reduce the FFR to the target more than an adaptor that differed in frequency (by 1.24 octaves). Thus, there was no evidence that the FFR originated mainly from neurons tuned to the frequency of the target. Instead, the results are consistent with the suggestion that the FFR for low-frequency pure tones at medium to high levels mainly originates from neurons tuned to higher frequencies. Implications for the use and interpretation of the FFR are discussed.
频率跟随反应(FFR)是一种通过头皮记录的,用于测量与刺激相关的周期性信号所引起的锁相脑干活动的指标。三项实验利用适应效应研究了FFR对载波频率和调制频率的特异性。对交替极性刺激诱发的FFR波形,分别对每个极性进行平均,然后相加以增强包络,或相减以增强时间精细结构信息。第一个实验研究了纯音和复合音的FFR在刺激频率和基频(F0)作用下的刺激后适应情况。结果表明,与低频或低F0的声音相比,FFR对高频或高F0声音的反应表现出更多的适应。第二个实验研究了FFR对调制率的调谐情况。与调制率为90或504 Hz的适应刺激相比,调制率为213 Hz的复合音的适应刺激并没有使FFR降低得更多,因此没有证据表明FFR主要起源于对刺激调制率有选择性反应的神经元。第三个实验使用纯音研究了FFR对音频频率的调谐情况。与频率相差1.24倍频程的适应刺激相比,与目标频率相同(213或504 Hz)的适应刺激通常不会使目标FFR降低得更多。因此,没有证据表明FFR主要起源于对目标频率进行调谐的神经元。相反,结果与以下观点一致:中高水平低频纯音的FFR主要起源于对较高频率进行调谐的神经元。本文讨论了FFR在应用和解释方面的意义。