4.5 Review

Action-related auditory ERP attenuation: Paradigms and hypotheses

Journal

BRAIN RESEARCH
Volume 1626, Issue -, Pages 54-65

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2015.03.038

Keywords

Hearing; Forward modeling; Attention; Prediction; Event-related potentials (ERP)

Categories

Funding

  1. Hungarian Scientific Research Fund-OTKA [108783]

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A number studies have shown that the auditory Ni event-related potential (ERP) is attenuated when elicited by self-induced or self-generated sounds. Because Ni is a correlate of auditory feature- and event-detection, it was generally assumed that N1-attenuation reflected the cancellation of auditory re-afference, enabled by the internal forward modeling of the predictable sensory consequences of the given action. Focusing on paradigms utilizing non-speech actions, the present review summarizes recent progress on action-related auditory attenuation. Following a critical analysis of the most widely used, contingent paradigm, two further hypotheses on the possible causes of action-related auditory ERP attenuation are presented. The attention hypotheses suggest that auditory ERP attenuation is brought about by a temporary division of attention between the action and the auditory stimulation. The pre-activation hypothesis suggests that the attenuation is caused by the activation of a sensory template during the initiation of the action, which interferes with the incoming stimulation. Although each hypothesis can account for a number of findings, none of them can accommodate the whole spectrum of results. It is suggested that a better understanding of auditory ERP attenuation phenomena could be achieved by systematic investigations of the types of actions, the degree of action-effect contingency, and the temporal characteristics of action-effect contingency representation-buildup and -deactivation. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled SI: Prediction and Attention. (C) 2015 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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