The concept of perceptual inferences taking place over multiple timescales simultaneously raises questions about how the brain can balance the demands of remaining sensitive to local rarity while utilising more global longer-term predictability to modulate cortical responses. In the present study auditory evoked potentials to four presentations of the same sound sequence containing predictable structure on a local (milliseconds to seconds) and more global (many minutes) timescales were recorded. The results from 33 participants are used to demonstrate that predictions about both local (internal predictive models) and global (meta-models that define expected precisions associated with familiar internal model states) regularities are formed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAuditory perceptual inference engages learning of complex statistical information about the environment. Inferences assist us to simplify perception highlighting what can be predicted on the basis of prior learning (through the formation of internal "prediction" models) and what might be new, potentially necessitating an investment of resources to remodel predictions. In the present study, we tested the hypothesis that sound sequences with multiple levels of predictability may rely on cognitive resources and be cognitively penetrable to a greater extent than was previously shown by studies presenting simpler sound sequences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaternal exposure to infectious agents during gestation has been identified as a significant risk factor for schizophrenia. Using a mouse model, past work has demonstrated that the gestational timing of the immune-activating event can impact the behavioural phenotype and expression of dopaminergic and glutamatergic neurotransmission markers in the offspring. In order to determine the inter-species generality of this effect to rats, another commonly used model species, the current study investigated the impact of a viral mimetic Poly (I:C) at either an early (gestational day 10) or late (gestational day 19) time-point on schizophrenia-related behaviour and neurotransmitter receptor expression in rat offspring.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe mismatch negativity (MMN) is conceptualized as a confidence-weighted error signal elicited when a deviation violates the predicted next-state based on regularity. The mechanisms underpinning its generation remain contentious. Smaller MMN response is a robust finding in schizophrenia and reduced amplitude may implicate impairment in prediction-error signalling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF