AI Article Synopsis

  • An abrupt change in sound can trigger a specific brain response (Change-N1) that is measured between 100-180 ms after the change occurs, and this response can be reduced by a weak preceding sound (Prepulse).
  • In a study with 31 healthy participants, researchers found that significant brain activity (Change-N1) happened when an abrupt 10-dB increase was made after a quieter sound, and they used electrodes to monitor this activity across various regions of the brain.
  • The findings showed that while the Change-N1 response was significant in the frontal/central areas and favored the right side, the overall percentage of Prepulse Inhibition (PPI) was consistent across different regions, suggesting that both Change-N1 and PPI

Article Abstract

An abrupt change in a sound feature (Test) in a continuous sound elicits an auditory evoked potential, peaking at approx. 100-180 ms (Change-N1) after the change onset. Change-N1 is attenuated by a preceding weak change stimulus (Prepulse), in the phenomenon known as prepulse inhibition (PPI). In this electroencephalographic study, we compared these two indexes among scalp electrodes. Change-N1 was elicited by an abrupt 10-dB increase in sound pressure in repeats of a 70-dB click sound at 100 Hz and was recorded using 22 electrodes in 31 healthy subjects. The prepulse was a 10-dB decrease in three consecutive clicks at 30, 40, and 50 ms before the Test onset. Four stimuli (Test alone, Test with Prepulse, Prepulse alone, and background alone) were presented randomly through headphones at an even probability. The results demonstrated that: (1) Electrodes at the frontal/central midline were reconfirmed to be suitable to record Change-N1; (2) Change-N1 showed right-hemisphere predominance; (3) There was no difference in the %PPI among regions (prefrontal/frontal/central) and hemispheres (midline/left/right); and (4) the Change-N1 amplitude and its PPI at prefrontal electrodes were positively correlated with those at the frontal electrodes. These results support the use of Change-N1 and its PPI as a tool to evaluate the change detection sensitivity and inhibitory function in individuals. The use of prefrontal electrodes can be an option for a screening test.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neulet.2021.135804DOI Listing

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