Plastic brain mechanisms for attaining auditory temporal order judgment proficiency.


Autoria(s): Bernasconi, F.; Grivel, J.; Murray, M.M.; Spierer, L.
Data(s)

15/04/2010

Resumo

Accurate perception of the order of occurrence of sensory information is critical for the building up of coherent representations of the external world from ongoing flows of sensory inputs. While some psychophysical evidence reports that performance on temporal perception can improve, the underlying neural mechanisms remain unresolved. Using electrical neuroimaging analyses of auditory evoked potentials (AEPs), we identified the brain dynamics and mechanism supporting improvements in auditory temporal order judgment (TOJ) during the course of the first vs. latter half of the experiment. Training-induced changes in brain activity were first evident 43-76 ms post stimulus onset and followed from topographic, rather than pure strength, AEP modulations. Improvements in auditory TOJ accuracy thus followed from changes in the configuration of the underlying brain networks during the initial stages of sensory processing. Source estimations revealed an increase in the lateralization of initially bilateral posterior sylvian region (PSR) responses at the beginning of the experiment to left-hemisphere dominance at its end. Further supporting the critical role of left and right PSR in auditory TOJ proficiency, as the experiment progressed, responses in the left and right PSR went from being correlated to un-correlated. These collective findings provide insights on the neurophysiologic mechanism and plasticity of temporal processing of sounds and are consistent with models based on spike timing dependent plasticity.

Identificador

https://serval.unil.ch/notice/serval:BIB_75F6EAD48CFA

info:pmid:20079445

pmid:20079445

doi:10.1016/j.neuroimage.2010.01.016

isiid:000275408200041

Idioma(s)

eng

Fonte

NeuroImage5031271-1279

Palavras-Chave #Adult; Auditory Perception/physiology; Brain/physiology; Brain Mapping; Electroencephalography; Evoked Potentials, Auditory; Functional Laterality; Humans; Judgment/physiology; Learning/physiology; Male; Neuronal Plasticity; Practice (Psychology); Signal Processing, Computer-Assisted; Time Perception/physiology; Young Adult
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article

article