论文标题
音乐中的巨大期望:违反节奏期望引起嵌套在theta振荡中的额叶伽玛活动晚期活动
Great expectations in music: violation of rhythmic expectancies elicits late frontal gamma activity nested in theta oscillations
论文作者
论文摘要
节奏处理涉及根据听觉事件的层次时间结构来建立期望。尽管在预测编码的背景下已经解决了节奏处理,但在不同皮层区域的振荡响应的性能仍然不清楚。我们探讨了神经反应对节奏不一致的振荡特性,并探索了多个频率之间的跨频耦合,以提供预测性编码和节奏感知的概念之间的联系。我们设计了一个实验,以研究对有节奏偏差的神经反应,其中音调要么早于预期,要么省略了相同度量位置的音调。这两种操纵对节奏结构的调节方式不同,前者造成了对音乐刺激的一般结构的更大侵犯,而不是后者。这两种偏差都会产生MMN响应,而只有节奏的变异剂导致随后的P3A。有节奏的偏差是由于音调的早期出现而引起的,但不是疏忽的异常引起的,在P3A末端在左额叶区域末端引起了晚期的高伽马反应(60-80 Hz),这很有趣,有趣的是,这与同一区域的P3A振幅相关,并在Theta振荡中也嵌套在Theta振荡中。引起的高频γ振荡与节奏偏差有关的时间表明,它可能与预测性神经模型的更新有关,与高级皮质区域中事件的时间结构相对应。
Rhythm processing involves building expectations according to the hierarchical temporal structure of auditory events. Although rhythm processing has been addressed in the context of predictive coding, the properties of the oscillatory response in different cortical areas is still not clear. We explored the oscillatory properties of the neural response to rhythmic incongruence and explored the cross-frequency coupling between multiple frequencies to provide links between the concepts of predictive coding and rhythm perception. We designed an experiment to investigate the neural response to rhythmic deviations in which the tone either arrived earlier than expected or the tone in the same metrical position was omitted. These two manipulations modulate the rhythmic structure differently, with the former creating a larger violation of the general structure of the musical stimulus than the latter. Both deviations resulted in an MMN response, whereas only the rhythmic deviant resulted in a subsequent P3a. Rhythmic deviants due to the early occurrence of a tone, but not omission deviants, elicited a late high gamma response (60-80 Hz) at the end of the P3a over the left frontal region, which, interestingly, correlated with the P3a amplitude over the same region and was also nested in theta oscillations. The timing of the elicited high-frequency gamma oscillations related to rhythmic deviation suggests that it might be related to the update of the predictive neural model, corresponding to the temporal structure of the events in higher-level cortical areas.