4.5 Article

Hemispheric asymmetry in mid and long latency neuromagnetic responses to single clicks

Journal

HEARING RESEARCH
Volume 257, Issue 1-2, Pages 41-52

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.heares.2009.07.010

Keywords

Auditory; Evoked field; M100; N1m; Lateralization; MEG

Funding

  1. National Institute of Deafness and Other Communication Disorders of the National Institutes of Health [DC-00046, 2R01 DC05660]

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We examine lateralization in the evoked magnetic field response to a click stimulus, observing that lateralization effects previously demonstrated for tones, noise, frequency modulated sweeps and certain syllables are also observed for (acoustically simpler) clicks. These effects include a difference in the peak latency of the M100 component of the evoked field waveform such that the peak consistently appears earlier in the right hemisphere, as well as rightward lateralization of field amplitude during the rise of the M100 component. Our review of previous findings on M100 lateralization, taken together with our data on the click-evoked response, leads to the hypothesis that these lateralization effects are elicited by stimuli containing a sharp sound energy onset or acoustic transition rather than specific types of stimuli. We argue that both the latency and the amplitude lateralization effects have a common origin, namely, hemispheric asymmetry in the amplitude of the magnetic field generated by one or more sources active during the M100 rise. While anatomical asymmetry cannot be excluded as the cause of the amplitude difference, we propose that the difference reflects a rightward asymmetry in the processing of sound energy onsets that potentially underlies the lateralization of several functions. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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