Teichert Tobias
Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, BST W 1658, 200 Lothrop Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Hear Res. 2016 Jun;336:29-43. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2016.04.001. Epub 2016 Apr 13.
The rhesus monkey is an important model of human auditory function in general and auditory deficits in neuro-psychiatric diseases such as schizophrenia in particular. Several rhesus monkey studies have described homologs of clinically relevant auditory evoked potentials such as pitch-based mismatch negativity, a fronto-central negativity that can be observed when a series of regularly repeating sounds is disrupted by a sound of different tonal frequency. As a result it is well known how differences of tonal frequency are represented in rhesus monkey EEG. However, to date there is no study that systematically quantified how absolute tonal frequency itself is represented. In particular, it is not known if frequency affects rhesus monkey EEG component amplitude and topography in the same way as previously shown for humans. A better understanding of the effect of frequency may strengthen inter-species homology and will provide a more solid foundation on which to build the interpretation of frequency MMN in the rhesus monkey. Using arrays of up to 32 cranial EEG electrodes in 4 rhesus macaques we identified 8 distinct auditory evoked components including the N85, a fronto-central negativity that is the presumed homolog of the human N1. In line with human data, the amplitudes of most components including the N85 peaked around 1000 Hz and were strongly attenuated above ∼1750 Hz. Component topography, however, remained largely unaffected by frequency. This latter finding may be consistent with the known absence of certain anatomical structures in the rhesus monkey that are believed to cause the changes in topography in the human by inducing a rotation of generator orientation as a function of tonal frequency. Overall, the findings are consistent with the assumption of a homolog representation of tonal frequency in human and rhesus monkey EEG.
恒河猴是研究人类听觉功能的重要模型,尤其适用于研究精神分裂症等神经精神疾病中的听觉缺陷。多项针对恒河猴的研究描述了与临床相关的听觉诱发电位的同源物,例如基于音高的失配负波,这是一种额中央负波,当一系列有规律重复的声音被不同音调频率的声音打断时可以观察到。因此,恒河猴脑电图中音调频率差异的表现方式已为人熟知。然而,迄今为止,尚无研究系统地量化绝对音调频率本身是如何被表征的。特别是,尚不清楚频率对恒河猴脑电图成分的幅度和地形图的影响是否与先前在人类中显示的方式相同。更好地理解频率的影响可能会加强种间同源性,并为解释恒河猴的频率失配负波提供更坚实的基础。我们在4只恒河猴中使用了多达32个颅骨脑电图电极阵列,识别出8种不同的听觉诱发成分,包括N85,一种额中央负波,被认为是人类N1的同源物。与人类数据一致,包括N85在内的大多数成分的幅度在1000Hz左右达到峰值,并在约1750Hz以上大幅衰减。然而,成分地形图在很大程度上不受频率影响。后一发现可能与恒河猴中某些解剖结构的已知缺失一致,这些结构被认为通过诱导发生器方向随音调频率的旋转而导致人类地形图的变化。总体而言,这些发现与人类和恒河猴脑电图中音调频率同源表征的假设一致。