Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets

Mismatch negativity (MMN) is a candidate biomarker for neuropsychiatric disease. Understanding the extent to which it reflects cognitive deviance-detection or purely sensory processes will assist practitioners in making informed clinical interpretations. This study compares the utility of deviance-d...

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Main Author: Jamie A. O’Reilly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-12-01
Series:IBRO Neuroscience Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667242121000385
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spelling doaj-6b2a91f6828e41728a269e29de9788652021-09-29T04:27:30ZengElsevierIBRO Neuroscience Reports2667-24212021-12-0111128136Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosetsJamie A. O’Reilly0College of Biomedical Engineering, Rangsit University, 52/347 Muang-Ake, Phaholyothin Road, Pathumthani 12000, ThailandMismatch negativity (MMN) is a candidate biomarker for neuropsychiatric disease. Understanding the extent to which it reflects cognitive deviance-detection or purely sensory processes will assist practitioners in making informed clinical interpretations. This study compares the utility of deviance-detection and sensory-processing theories for describing MMN-like auditory responses of a common marmoset monkey during roving oddball stimulation. The following exploratory analyses were performed on an existing dataset: responses during the transition and repetition sequence of the roving oddball paradigm (standard -> deviant/S1 -> S2 -> S3) were compared; long-latency potentials evoked by deviant stimuli were examined using a double-epoch waveform subtraction; effects of increasing stimulus repetitions on standard and deviant responses were analyzed; and transitions between standard and deviant stimuli were divided into ascending and descending frequency changes to explore contributions of frequency-sensitivity. An enlarged auditory response to deviant stimuli was observed. This decreased exponentially with stimulus repetition, characteristic of sensory gating. A slow positive deflection was viewed over approximately 300–800 ms after the deviant stimulus, which is more difficult to ascribe to afferent sensory mechanisms. When split into ascending and descending frequency transitions, the resulting difference waveforms were disproportionally influenced by descending frequency deviant stimuli. This asymmetry is inconsistent with the general deviance-detection theory of MMN. These findings tentatively suggest that MMN-like responses from common marmosets are predominantly influenced by rapid sensory adaptation and frequency preference of the auditory cortex, while deviance-detection may play a role in long-latency activity.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667242121000385Mismatch negativityPredictive codingDeviance detectionSensory adaptationAuditory neurophysiology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jamie A. O’Reilly
spellingShingle Jamie A. O’Reilly
Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
IBRO Neuroscience Reports
Mismatch negativity
Predictive coding
Deviance detection
Sensory adaptation
Auditory neurophysiology
author_facet Jamie A. O’Reilly
author_sort Jamie A. O’Reilly
title Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
title_short Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
title_full Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
title_fullStr Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
title_full_unstemmed Roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
title_sort roving oddball paradigm elicits sensory gating, frequency sensitivity, and long-latency response in common marmosets
publisher Elsevier
series IBRO Neuroscience Reports
issn 2667-2421
publishDate 2021-12-01
description Mismatch negativity (MMN) is a candidate biomarker for neuropsychiatric disease. Understanding the extent to which it reflects cognitive deviance-detection or purely sensory processes will assist practitioners in making informed clinical interpretations. This study compares the utility of deviance-detection and sensory-processing theories for describing MMN-like auditory responses of a common marmoset monkey during roving oddball stimulation. The following exploratory analyses were performed on an existing dataset: responses during the transition and repetition sequence of the roving oddball paradigm (standard -> deviant/S1 -> S2 -> S3) were compared; long-latency potentials evoked by deviant stimuli were examined using a double-epoch waveform subtraction; effects of increasing stimulus repetitions on standard and deviant responses were analyzed; and transitions between standard and deviant stimuli were divided into ascending and descending frequency changes to explore contributions of frequency-sensitivity. An enlarged auditory response to deviant stimuli was observed. This decreased exponentially with stimulus repetition, characteristic of sensory gating. A slow positive deflection was viewed over approximately 300–800 ms after the deviant stimulus, which is more difficult to ascribe to afferent sensory mechanisms. When split into ascending and descending frequency transitions, the resulting difference waveforms were disproportionally influenced by descending frequency deviant stimuli. This asymmetry is inconsistent with the general deviance-detection theory of MMN. These findings tentatively suggest that MMN-like responses from common marmosets are predominantly influenced by rapid sensory adaptation and frequency preference of the auditory cortex, while deviance-detection may play a role in long-latency activity.
topic Mismatch negativity
Predictive coding
Deviance detection
Sensory adaptation
Auditory neurophysiology
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2667242121000385
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