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      Predictable tones elicit stimulus-specific suppression of evoked activity in auditory cortex

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      Creators
      Han, B.
      Mostert, P.
      Lange, F.P. de
      Date of Archiving
      2019
      Archive
      Radboud Data Repository
      Data archive handle
      https://hdl.handle.net/11633/aacfytwf
      DOI
      http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2019.06.033
      Related publications
      Predictable tones elicit stimulus-specific suppression of evoked activity in auditory cortex  
      Publication type
      Dataset
      Access level
      Open access
      Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2066/203781   https://hdl.handle.net/2066/203781
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      Organization
      PI Group Predictive Brain
      SW OZ DCC CO
      Audience(s)
      Life sciences
      Languages used
      English
      Key words
      Auditory; MEG; Expectation suppression
      Abstract
      The auditory cortex is sensitive to many forms of acoustic regularity, resulting in suppressed neural activity for expected auditory events. It is unclear whether this activity reduction for expected events is the result of suppression of neurons that are tuned to the expected stimulus (i.e., dampening), or alternatively suppression of neurons that are tuned away from the expected stimulus (i.e., sharpening). In the present study, we adjudicated between these models by characterizing the effect of expectation on the ability to classify the identity of auditory stimuli from auditory neural activity patterns, using magnetoencephalography (MEG) in healthy human observers. Participants listened to pure tone pairs, in which the identity of the second tone was either expected or unexpected. The task of the participants was to detect a target tone, which deviated strongly from both the expected and unexpected tones. We found a strong suppression of the overall neural response in the expected condition compared to the unexpected condition. Linear classifiers showed a reduced ability to decode stimulus identity from event-related auditory fields in the expected condition compared to the unexpected condition. This suggests that stimulus-specific event-related activity is dampened for expected tones in auditory cortex. 
      This item appears in the following Collection(s)
      • Datasets [1441]
      • Donders Centre for Cognitive Neuroimaging [3594]
      • Faculty of Social Sciences [28499]
       
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