4.6 Article

Context Sensitivity across Multiple Time scales with a Flexible Frequency Bandwidth

Journal

CEREBRAL CORTEX
Volume 32, Issue 1, Pages 158-175

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/cercor/bhab200

Keywords

adaptation; computational modeling; EEG; ERP; human auditory cortex

Categories

Funding

  1. Hoffman Leadership and Responsibility Program at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  2. Israel Science Foundation
  3. Jack H. Skirball research fund
  4. Israel Academy of Sciences [390/13]
  5. AdERC grant from the European Research Council [340063]
  6. European Research Council (ERC) [340063] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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The study revealed that the human auditory cortex is sensitive to the content of past stimulation and that neural responses measured at different latencies after stimulus onset are influenced by frequency intervals computed over distinct timescales. Early responses are more influenced by the history of stimulation than later responses. A model consisting of neural populations with frequency-specific but broad tuning can explain these results.
Everyday auditory streams are complex, including spectro-temporal content that varies at multiple timescales. Using EEG, we investigated the sensitivity of human auditory cortex to the content of past stimulation in unattended sequences of equiprobable tones. In 3 experiments including 82 participants overall, we found that neural responses measured at different latencies after stimulus onset were sensitive to frequency intervals computed over distinct timescales. Importantly, early responses were sensitive to a longer history of stimulation than later responses. To account for these results, we tested a model consisting of neural populations with frequency-specific but broad tuning that undergo adaptation with exponential recovery. We found that the coexistence of neural populations with distinct recovery rates can explain our results. Furthermore, the adaptation bandwidth of these populations depended on spectral context-it was wider when the stimulation sequence had a wider frequency range. Our results provide electrophysiological evidence as well as a possible mechanistic explanation for dynamic and multiscale context-dependent auditory processing in the human cortex.

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