Todd Juanita, Yeark Mattsen, Auriac Paul, Paton Bryan, Winkler István
School of Psychological Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, Australia.
Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology, Research Centre for Natural Sciences, Budapest, Hungary.
Cortex. 2024 Mar;172:114-124. doi: 10.1016/j.cortex.2023.10.026. Epub 2024 Jan 16.
Event-related potentials (ERPs) acquired during task-free passive listening can be used to study how sensitivity to common pattern repetitions and rare deviations changes over time. These changes are purported to represent the formation and accumulation of precision in internal models that anticipate future states based on probabilistic and/or statistical learning. This study features an unexpected finding; a strong order-dependence in the speed with which deviant responses are elicited that anchors to first learning. Participants heard four repetitions of a sequence in which an equal number of short (30 msec) and long (60 msec) pure tones were arranged into four blocks in which one was common (the standard, p = .875) and the other rare (the deviant, p = .125) with probabilities alternating across blocks. Some participants always heard the sequences commencing with the 30 msec deviant block, and others always with the 60 msec deviant block first. A deviance-detection component known as mismatch negativity (MMN) was extracted from responses and the point in time at which MMN reached maximum amplitude was used as the dependent variable. The results show that if participants heard sequences commencing with the 60 msec deviant block first, the MMN to the 60 msec and 30 msec deviant peaked at an equivalent latency. However, if participants heard sequences commencing with the 30 msec deviant first, the MMN peaked earlier to the 60 msec deviant. Furthermore, while the 30 msec MMN latency did not differ as a function of sequence composition, the 60 msec MMN latency did and was earlier when the sequences began with a 30 msec deviant first. By examining MMN latency effects as a function of age and hearing level it was apparent that the differentiation in 30 msec and 60 msec MMN latency expands with older age and raised hearing threshold due to prolongation of the time taken for the 30 msec MMN to peak. The observations are discussed with reference to how the initial sound composition may tune the auditory system to be more sensitive to different cues (i.e., offset responses vs perceived loudness). The order-effect demonstrates a remarkably powerful anchoring to first learning that might reflect initial tuning to the most valuable discriminating feature within a given listening environment, an effect that defies explanation based on statistical information alone.
在无任务被动聆听期间获得的事件相关电位(ERP)可用于研究对常见模式重复和罕见偏差的敏感度如何随时间变化。据称,这些变化代表了基于概率和/或统计学习来预测未来状态的内部模型中精度的形成和积累。本研究有一个意外发现:诱发偏差反应的速度存在强烈的顺序依赖性,且这种依赖性以首次学习为锚定。参与者听了一个序列的四次重复,其中短(30毫秒)和长(60毫秒)纯音数量相等,被安排成四个组块,其中一个是常见的(标准组块,p = 0.875),另一个是罕见的(偏差组块,p = 0.125),概率在组块间交替。一些参与者总是先听到以30毫秒偏差组块开头的序列,而另一些参与者总是先听到以60毫秒偏差组块开头的序列。从反应中提取了一种称为失配负波(MMN)的偏差检测成分,并将MMN达到最大振幅的时间点用作因变量。结果表明,如果参与者先听到以60毫秒偏差组块开头的序列,那么对60毫秒和30毫秒偏差的MMN在等效潜伏期达到峰值。然而,如果参与者先听到以30毫秒偏差开头的序列,MMN对60毫秒偏差的峰值出现得更早。此外,虽然30毫秒MMN潜伏期不受序列组成的影响,但60毫秒MMN潜伏期受影响,且当序列以30毫秒偏差开头时潜伏期更早。通过检查MMN潜伏期效应随年龄和听力水平的变化,很明显,由于30毫秒MMN达到峰值所需时间延长,30毫秒和60毫秒MMN潜伏期的差异随着年龄增长和听力阈值升高而扩大。结合初始声音组成如何使听觉系统对不同线索(即起始反应与感知响度)更敏感来讨论这些观察结果。这种顺序效应显示出对首次学习的显著强大的锚定作用,这可能反映了在给定聆听环境中对最有价值的辨别特征的初始调整,这种效应仅基于统计信息难以解释。