Stimulus-specific adaptation and deviance detection in the rat auditory cortex.

PLoS One

Department of Neurobiology, Silberman Institute of Life Sciences, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel.

Published: December 2011

AI Article Synopsis

  • Stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA) refers to the reduced response to a frequent standard stimulus, which doesn't transfer well to a rare deviant stimulus.
  • In a study with halothane-anesthetized rats, researchers found that responses to deviant tones were significantly larger even when there was a minor frequency difference, indicating strong SSA in the auditory cortex and suggesting hyper-resolution in frequency detection.
  • The responses to the deviant tones were influenced by their context within sequences; they were stronger when presented alone or in varied frequencies but weaker in closely spaced sequences, signifying the role of expectation and change detection in auditory processing.

Article Abstract

Stimulus-specific adaptation (SSA) is the specific decrease in the response to a frequent ('standard') stimulus, which does not generalize, or generalizes only partially, to another, rare stimulus ('deviant'). Stimulus-specific adaptation could result simply from the depression of the responses to the standard. Alternatively, there may be an increase in the responses to the deviant stimulus due to the violation of expectations set by the standard, indicating the presence of true deviance detection. We studied SSA in the auditory cortex of halothane-anesthetized rats, recording local field potentials and multi-unit activity. We tested the responses to pure tones of one frequency when embedded in sequences that differed from each other in the frequency and probability of the tones composing them. The responses to tones of the same frequency were larger when deviant than when standard, even with inter-stimulus time intervals of almost 2 seconds. Thus, SSA is present and strong in rat auditory cortex. SSA was present even when the frequency difference between deviants and standards was as small as 10%, substantially smaller than the typical width of cortical tuning curves, revealing hyper-resolution in frequency. Strong responses were evoked also by a rare tone presented by itself, and by rare tones presented as part of a sequence of many widely spaced frequencies. On the other hand, when presented within a sequence of narrowly spaced frequencies, the responses to a tone, even when rare, were smaller. A model of SSA that included only adaptation of the responses in narrow frequency channels predicted responses to the deviants that were substantially smaller than the observed ones. Thus, the response to a deviant is at least partially due to the change it represents relative to the regularity set by the standard tone, indicating the presence of true deviance detection in rat auditory cortex.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3154435PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0023369PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

auditory cortex
16
stimulus-specific adaptation
12
deviance detection
12
rat auditory
12
detection rat
8
responses
8
set standard
8
indicating presence
8
presence true
8
true deviance
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!