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How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?

How does the human brain extract regularities from its environment? There is evidence that short range or ‘local’ regularities (within seconds) are automatically detected by the brain while long range or ‘global’ regularities (over tens of seconds or more) require conscious awareness. In the present...

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Autores principales: Marti, Sébastien, Thibault, Louis, Dehaene, Stanislas
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4157871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25197987
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107227
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author Marti, Sébastien
Thibault, Louis
Dehaene, Stanislas
author_facet Marti, Sébastien
Thibault, Louis
Dehaene, Stanislas
author_sort Marti, Sébastien
collection PubMed
description How does the human brain extract regularities from its environment? There is evidence that short range or ‘local’ regularities (within seconds) are automatically detected by the brain while long range or ‘global’ regularities (over tens of seconds or more) require conscious awareness. In the present experiment, we asked whether participants' attention was needed to acquire such auditory regularities, to detect their violation or both. We designed a paradigm in which participants listened to predictable sounds. Subjects could be distracted by a visual task at two moments: when they were first exposed to a regularity or when they detected violations of this regularity. MEG recordings revealed that early brain responses (100–130 ms) to violations of short range regularities were unaffected by visual distraction and driven essentially by local transitional probabilities. Based on global workspace theory and prior results, we expected that visual distraction would eliminate the long range global effect, but unexpectedly, we found the contrary, i.e. late brain responses (300–600 ms) to violations of long range regularities on audio-visual trials but not on auditory only trials. Further analyses showed that, in fact, visual distraction was incomplete and that auditory and visual stimuli interfered in both directions. Our results show that conscious, attentive subjects can learn the long range dependencies present in auditory stimuli even while performing a visual task on synchronous visual stimuli. Furthermore, they acquire a complex regularity and end up making different predictions for the very same stimulus depending on the context (i.e. absence or presence of visual stimuli). These results suggest that while short-range regularity detection is driven by local transitional probabilities between stimuli, the human brain detects and stores long-range regularities in a highly flexible, context dependent manner.
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spelling pubmed-41578712014-09-09 How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context? Marti, Sébastien Thibault, Louis Dehaene, Stanislas PLoS One Research Article How does the human brain extract regularities from its environment? There is evidence that short range or ‘local’ regularities (within seconds) are automatically detected by the brain while long range or ‘global’ regularities (over tens of seconds or more) require conscious awareness. In the present experiment, we asked whether participants' attention was needed to acquire such auditory regularities, to detect their violation or both. We designed a paradigm in which participants listened to predictable sounds. Subjects could be distracted by a visual task at two moments: when they were first exposed to a regularity or when they detected violations of this regularity. MEG recordings revealed that early brain responses (100–130 ms) to violations of short range regularities were unaffected by visual distraction and driven essentially by local transitional probabilities. Based on global workspace theory and prior results, we expected that visual distraction would eliminate the long range global effect, but unexpectedly, we found the contrary, i.e. late brain responses (300–600 ms) to violations of long range regularities on audio-visual trials but not on auditory only trials. Further analyses showed that, in fact, visual distraction was incomplete and that auditory and visual stimuli interfered in both directions. Our results show that conscious, attentive subjects can learn the long range dependencies present in auditory stimuli even while performing a visual task on synchronous visual stimuli. Furthermore, they acquire a complex regularity and end up making different predictions for the very same stimulus depending on the context (i.e. absence or presence of visual stimuli). These results suggest that while short-range regularity detection is driven by local transitional probabilities between stimuli, the human brain detects and stores long-range regularities in a highly flexible, context dependent manner. Public Library of Science 2014-09-08 /pmc/articles/PMC4157871/ /pubmed/25197987 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107227 Text en © 2014 Marti et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Marti, Sébastien
Thibault, Louis
Dehaene, Stanislas
How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title_full How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title_fullStr How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title_full_unstemmed How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title_short How Does the Extraction of Local and Global Auditory Regularities Vary with Context?
title_sort how does the extraction of local and global auditory regularities vary with context?
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4157871/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25197987
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0107227
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