AI Article Synopsis

  • Previous studies indicate that the brain's response to unexpected auditory changes is automatic and reflects how we process sound, regardless of our attention.
  • The research involved subjects listening to tone pips while performing visual tracking tasks, finding that brain areas linked to sound processing were activated by unheard pitch changes, with activity varying based on task difficulty.
  • The results showed that when the primary task was more challenging, the brain's electrical response to the deviant tones was reduced, suggesting that attention to different tasks can significantly influence how we process unattended sensory information.

Article Abstract

Previous studies suggested that auditory change-specific neural responses are attention-independent and reflect central auditory processing. The automaticity of the brain's response to infrequent changes in pitch within a series of auditory tone pips was examined in parallel functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and event-related potential (ERP) studies. Subjects performed a continuous perceptual-motor visual tracking task at two levels of difficulty while simultaneously hearing a series of task-irrelevant standard tone pips and infrequent pitch-deviant tones. fMRI results revealed that the unattended pitch-deviant tones strongly activated superior temporal and frontal cortical regions. These activations were significantly modulated by the tracking difficulty of the primary task. ERP results revealed that the amplitude of the scalp-negative component evoked by deviant tones (MMN) was attenuated during the more difficult tracking task. Our results demonstrate that the brain's response to task-irrelevant sensory changes is strongly influenced by intermodal attentional demands.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/089892905775008698DOI Listing

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