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Processing of auditory novelty across the cortical hierarchy: An intracranial electrophysiology study
- Source :
- NeuroImage. 183:412-424
- Publication Year :
- 2018
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2018.
-
Abstract
- Under the predictive coding hypothesis, specific spatiotemporal patterns of cortical activation are postulated to occur during sensory processing as expectations generate feedback predictions and prediction errors generate feedforward signals. Establishing experimental evidence for this information flow within cortical hierarchy has been difficult, especially in humans, due to spatial and temporal limitations of non-invasive measures of cortical activity. This study investigated cortical responses to auditory novelty using the local/global deviant paradigm, which engages the hierarchical network underlying auditory predictive coding over short (‘local deviance’; LD) and long (‘global deviance’; GD) time scales. Electrocorticographic responses to auditory stimuli were obtained in neurosurgical patients from regions of interest (ROIs) including auditory, auditory-related and prefrontal cortex. LD and GD effects were assayed in averaged evoked potential (AEP) and high gamma (70-150 Hz) signals, the former likely dominated by local synaptic currents and the latter largely reflecting local spiking activity. AEP LD effects were distributed across all ROIs, with greatest percentage of significant sites in core and non-core auditory cortex. High gamma LD effects were localized primarily to auditory cortex in the superior temporal plane and on the lateral surface of the superior temporal gyrus (STG). LD effects exhibited progressively longer latencies in core, non-core, auditory-related and prefrontal cortices, consistent with feedforward signaling. The spatial distribution of AEP GD effects overlapped that of LD effects, but high gamma GD effects were more restricted to non-core areas. High gamma GD effects had shortest latencies in STG and preceded AEP GD effects in most ROIs. This latency profile, along with the paucity of high gamma GD effects in the superior temporal plane, suggest that the STG plays a prominent role in initiating novelty detection signals over long time scales. Thus, the data demonstrate distinct patterns of information flow in human cortex associated with auditory novelty detection over multiple time scales.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Male
0301 basic medicine
Drug Resistant Epilepsy
Time Factors
Sensory processing
Cognitive Neuroscience
medicine.medical_treatment
Biology
Auditory cortex
Novelty detection
Article
Young Adult
03 medical and health sciences
Superior temporal gyrus
0302 clinical medicine
Cortex (anatomy)
medicine
Gamma Rhythm
Humans
Evoked potential
Prefrontal cortex
Electrocorticography
030304 developmental biology
Auditory Cortex
0303 health sciences
medicine.diagnostic_test
Novelty
Middle Aged
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Neurology
Auditory Perception
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Female
Neuroscience
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10538119
- Volume :
- 183
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- NeuroImage
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d928fad1d0ae95c824355ddfb54d06e3