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      Memory-Based Mismatch Response to Frequency Changes in Rats

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          Abstract

          Any occasional changes in the acoustic environment are of potential importance for survival. In humans, the preattentive detection of such changes generates the mismatch negativity (MMN) component of event-related brain potentials. MMN is elicited to rare changes (‘deviants’) in a series of otherwise regularly repeating stimuli (‘standards’). Deviant stimuli are detected on the basis of a neural comparison process between the input from the current stimulus and the sensory memory trace of the standard stimuli. It is, however, unclear to what extent animals show a similar comparison process in response to auditory changes. To resolve this issue, epidural potentials were recorded above the primary auditory cortex of urethane-anesthetized rats. In an oddball condition, tone frequency was used to differentiate deviants interspersed randomly among a standard tone. Mismatch responses were observed at 60–100 ms after stimulus onset for frequency increases of 5% and 12.5% but not for similarly descending deviants. The response diminished when the silent inter-stimulus interval was increased from 375 ms to 600 ms for +5% deviants and from 600 ms to 1000 ms for +12.5% deviants. In comparison to the oddball condition the response also diminished in a control condition in which no repetitive standards were presented (equiprobable condition). These findings suggest that the rat mismatch response is similar to the human MMN and indicate that anesthetized rats provide a valuable model for studies of central auditory processing.

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          Most cited references42

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          Early selective-attention effect on evoked potential reinterpreted.

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            The concept of auditory stimulus representation in cognitive neuroscience.

            The sequence of neurophysiological processes elicited in the auditory system by a sound is analyzed in search of the stage at which the processes carrying sensory information cross the borderline beyond which they directly underlie sound perception. Neurophysiological data suggest that this transition occurs when the sensory input is mapped onto the physiological basis of sensory memory in the auditory cortex. At this point, the sensory information carried by the stimulus-elicited process corresponds, for the first time, to that contained by the actual sound percept. Before this stage, the sensory stimulus code is fragmentary, lacks the time dimension, cannot enter conscious perception, and is not accessible to top-down processes (voluntary mental operations). On these grounds, 2 distinct stages of auditory sensory processing, prerepresentational and representational, can be distinguished.
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              Mismatch negativity (MMN), the deviance-elicited auditory deflection, explained.

              The current review constitutes the first comprehensive look at the possibility that the mismatch negativity (MMN, the deflection of the auditory ERP/ERF elicited by stimulus change) might be generated by so-called fresh-afferent neuronal activity. This possibility has been repeatedly ruled out for the past 30 years, with the prevailing theoretical accounts relying on a memory-based explanation instead. We propose that the MMN is, in essence, a latency- and amplitude-modulated expression of the auditory N1 response, generated by fresh-afferent activity of cortical neurons that are under nonuniform levels of adaptation.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Editor
                Journal
                PLoS One
                plos
                plosone
                PLoS ONE
                Public Library of Science (San Francisco, USA )
                1932-6203
                2011
                6 September 2011
                : 6
                : 9
                : e24208
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Department of Psychology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland
                [2 ]Institute for Psychology, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary
                [3 ]Institute for Empirical research in Economics, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland
                [4 ]Department of Neurobiology, A.I. Virtanen Institute, University of Eastern Finland, Kuopio, Finland
                [5 ]Department of Mathematical Information Technology, University of Jyväskylä, Jyväskylä, Finland
                [6 ]Department of Psychology, Turku Institute for Advanced Studies, University of Turku, Turku, Finland
                Claremont Colleges, United States of America
                Author notes

                Conceived and designed the experiments: PA TR. Performed the experiments: PA MP AL. Analyzed the data: PA GS MN FC. Contributed reagents/materials/analysis tools: PA MP. Wrote the paper: PA GS TR MN FC MP AL. Drafted the manuscript: PA GS TR.

                Article
                PONE-D-11-09861
                10.1371/journal.pone.0024208
                3167833
                21915297
                6033f015-0c56-4641-9b93-5d9955ae7eb4
                Astikainen et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
                History
                : 1 June 2011
                : 2 August 2011
                Page count
                Pages: 6
                Categories
                Research Article
                Biology
                Model Organisms
                Animal Models
                Rat
                Neuroscience
                Cognitive Neuroscience
                Cognition
                Neurophysiology
                Central Nervous System
                Sensory Perception
                Psychoacoustics
                Psychophysics
                Sensory Systems
                Auditory System
                Animal Cognition
                Learning and Memory
                Neuroethology

                Uncategorized
                Uncategorized

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