AI Article Synopsis

  • Hearing develops early and is sophisticated at birth; the brain uses sound patterns to build internal models of the environment.
  • Newborns' brain responses were studied to see if they show context-dependent reactions to sound, indicating the presence of these internal models.
  • Results showed that when sounds have stable probabilities over time, newborns respond uniformly, but they differentiate responses when these sounds alternate, suggesting their brains adapt models based on context and emerging patterns.

Article Abstract

Hearing is one of the earliest senses to develop and is quite mature by birth. Contemporary theories assume that regularities in sound are exploited by the brain to create internal models of the environment. Through statistical learning, internal models extrapolate from patterns to predictions about subsequent experience. In adults, altered brain responses to sound enable us to infer the existence and properties of these models. In this study, brain potentials were used to determine whether newborns exhibit context-dependent modulations of a brain response that can be used to infer the existence and properties of internal models. Results are indicative of significant context-dependence in the responsivity to sound in newborns. When common and rare sounds continue in stable probabilities over a very long period, neonates respond to all sounds equivalently (no differentiation). However, when the same common and rare sounds at the same probabilities alternate over time, the neonate responses show clear differentiations. The context-dependence is consistent with the possibility that the neonate brain produces more precise internal models that discriminate between contexts when there is an emergent structure to be discovered but appears to adopt broader models when discrimination delivers little or no additional information about the environment.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8989996PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-09994-0DOI Listing

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