AI Article Synopsis

  • Animals constantly process sensory information, and their ability to detect changes in this input is crucial for survival, similar to how humans exhibit an auditory mismatch negativity (MMN) response to unexpected sounds.
  • Researchers studied larval zebrafish using advanced imaging techniques to investigate whether their brains show stimulus-specific adaptation to sounds, akin to responses seen in other animals.
  • The study found varying frequency-specific responses in zebrafish but did not identify a dedicated neural response to unexpected sound changes, suggesting that the mechanisms of auditory adaptation may vary evolutionarily across species.

Article Abstract

Animals receive a constant stream of sensory input, and detecting changes in this sensory landscape is critical to their survival. One signature of change detection in humans is the auditory mismatch negativity (MMN), a neural response to unexpected stimuli that deviate from a predictable sequence. This process requires the auditory system to adapt to specific repeated stimuli while remaining sensitive to novel input (stimulus-specific adaptation). MMN was originally described in humans, and equivalent responses have been found in other mammals and birds, but it is not known to what extent this deviance detection circuitry is evolutionarily conserved. Here we present the first evidence for stimulus-specific adaptation in the brain of a teleost fish, using whole-brain calcium imaging of larval zebrafish at single-neuron resolution with selective plane illumination microscopy. We found frequency-specific responses across the brain with variable response amplitudes for frequencies of the same volume, and created a loudness curve to model this effect. We presented an auditory 'oddball' stimulus in an otherwise predictable train of pure tone stimuli, and did not find a population of neurons with specific responses to deviant tones that were not otherwise explained by stimulus-specific adaptation. Further, we observed no deviance responses to an unexpected omission of a sound in a repetitive sequence of white noise bursts. These findings extend the known scope of auditory adaptation and deviance responses across the evolutionary tree, and lay groundwork for future studies to describe the circuitry underlying auditory adaptation at the level of individual neurons.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11195219PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.06.14.597058DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

stimulus-specific adaptation
16
adaptation deviance
8
deviance detection
8
larval zebrafish
8
deviance responses
8
auditory adaptation
8
adaptation
6
auditory
5
responses
5
evidence auditory
4

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!