24,451 results on '"Evoked Potentials, Auditory"'
Search Results
2. Auditory central pathways in children and adolescents with multiple sclerosis.
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Nascimento Barbosa, Dayane Aparecida, Fagundes Silva, Liliane Aparecida, Giannella Samelli, Alessandra, Albino da Paz, José, and Gentile Matas, Carla
- Abstract
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- 2023
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3. Sensorimotor rhythm neurofeedback training and auditory perception
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Stanković Ivana, Ilić Nela V., Ilić Tihomir V., Jeličić Ljiljana, Sovilj Mirjana, Martić Vesna, Punišić Silvana, and Stokić Miodrag
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auditory perception ,cognition ,electroencephalography ,event-related potentials, p300 ,evoked potentials, auditory ,feedback, sensory ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background/Aim. In everyday communication, people are exposed to a myriad of sounds that need to be sorted and relevant information extracted. The ability of a person to concentrate on certain sounds in a noisy background environment, perform selective attention, and focus their auditory attention is crucial for everyday functioning and communication. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of the sensorimotor rhythm (SMR) (12–15 Hz) neurofeedback (NFB) training to improve auditory cognition measured by the achievements in the Quick speech-in-noise (QuickSIN) test, changes in the amplitudes and latencies of components of auditory evoked potentials (AEP) N100, N200, and P300 in the auditory oddball discrimination task, and changes in the spectral power of the SMR. Methods. The study included 16 healthy participants aged 25–40 years (8 males and 8 females). Each participant had 20 daily sessions of SMR NFB training. Auditory cognitive functions and electrophysiological correlates of cognitive processing were recorded 5 times – before NFB, after 5, 10, and 20 sessions, and one month after the last session of NFB. Re-sults. The results showed a statistically significant decrease in N200 and P300 latencies at frontal midline (Fz), central midline (Cz), and parietal midline (Pz) regions, an improvement on the QuickSIN test, and an increase in electroencephalogram SMR rhythm spectral power in the Cz region as a result of the NFB SMR training. No significant effect of the NFB training on the N100, N200, and P300 amplitudes on Fz, Cz, and Pz was found. Conclusion. The obtained results suggest that SMR NFB affects auditory perception in terms of shorter latencies of AEP and better performance on the QuickSIN test.
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- 2023
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4. Effect of neurofeedback training on auditory evoked potentials’ late components reaction time: A placebo-control study
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Stanković Ivana, Ilić Nela V., Ilić Tihomir V., Jeličić Ljiljana, Sovilj Mirjana, Martić Vesna, Punišić Silvana, and Stokić Miodrag
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attention ,brain ,cognition ,electroencephalography ,event-related potentials, p300 ,evoked potentials, auditory ,feedback, sensory ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background/Aim. Neurofeedback (NFB) training of sensorimotor rhythm (SMR) contributes to improving cognitive performance and increasing attention. SMR power is increased when a person is focused and task-oriented. The shorter reaction time (RT) of the P300 auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) is associated with better attention. Hence, the increase in SMR power after NFB SMR training should decrease the RT in a cognitive task. The aim of the study was to examine the ability of healthy individuals to modulate the SMR of electroencephalographic (EEG) activity between 12 and 15 Hz during 20-day NFB training sessions. In addition, the effect of NFB SMR training on RT was investigated. Methods. Participants were divided into experimental and control groups, with 24 subjects (12 males and 12 females) in each group, aged between 25 and 40 years. Participants in the experimental group were trained with authentic NFB SMR training, while in the control group, false (placebo) training was applied. AEPs were registered on five occasions: before NFB training, after 5, 10, and 20 training sessions, and one month after the last training. Results. The results showed that a series of 20 NFB SMR training sessions increased the amplitudes of the SMR. RT in the experimental group was significantly shortened, while in the control group, it was not observed. Moreover, the increase in the power of the EEG signal o f t he S MR showed a negative correlation with RT, but only in a subgroup of male subjects. Conclusion. The obtained results indicate the effects of NFB training on the improvement of the attention process expressed by RT.
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- 2023
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5. Auditory middle latency responses and hearing skills in adults
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Vitor Cantele Malavolta, Daniélli Rampelotto Tessele, Hélinton Goulart Moreira, Vanessa Weber, Vanessa de Oliveira Cristiano Nascimento, Dara Eliza Rohers, Larine da Silva Soares, Piotr Henryk Skarzynski, Milaine Dominici Sanfins, and Michele Vargas Garcia
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Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Adult ,Hearing ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Purpose: to compare the Auditory Middle Latency Response in adults, one group with and another group without altered auditory skills. In addition, the aim was to compare cut-off values of 30% and 50% for the Ear Effect in terms of sensitivity and specificity. Methods: the sample comprised 32 individuals of both genders with no hearing loss who were divided into Group 1 (16 individuals with no alterations in auditory skills) and Group 2 (16 individuals with alterations in auditory skills). All participants received an audiological evaluation and measurement of Brainstem and Auditory Middle Latency Potentials. Results: when Group 1 and Group 2 were compared, a statistically significant difference was only observed in Na and Pa amplitude of waves A1C3 and A2C3. In the analysis of sensitivity and specificity of the Auditory Middle Latency Response, a cut-off value of 50% gave a better balance between sensitivity and specificity. Conclusion: adults presented with altered auditory abilities had smaller response amplitudes in the Na and Pa components of the waves generated in the left hemisphere. A cut-off value of 50% gave a better discrimination of the Ear Effect for identifying subjects with altered auditory skills.
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- 2023
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6. Late auditory event-related potential changes after sensorimotor rhythm neurofeedback training
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Stanković Ivana, Ilić Tihomir V., Jeličić Ljiljana, Subotić Miško, Martić Vesna, Sovilj Mirjana, Ilić Nela V., and Stokić Miodrag
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brain ,cognition ,electroencephalography ,event-related potentials, p300 ,evoked potentials ,evoked potentials, auditory ,feedback, sensory ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
Background/Aim. Neurofeedback (NFB) is a therapeutic method based on monitoring the electroencephalogram (EEG) and providing feedback on the brain activity of sub-jects. The aim of the pilot study was to investigate the effect of lower-beta or sensorimotor rhythm (SMR) (12–15 Hz) NFB training on amplitudes and latencies of late auditory event-related potentials (aERP) components N100, N200, P300 in Go-No go task of auditory discrimination. Methods. Each of 9 healthy participants aged 25–40 years (4 male) had 20 daily sessions of SMR neurofeedback training. The aERP was recorded 5 times: before NFB, after 5, 10, and 20 sessions, and one m onth after the last session. Results. The results showed a statistically significant decrease in N100, N200, and P300 latencies at Fz, Cz, and Pz regions. No significant effect of NFB training on amplitudes of components N100, N200 and N300 was found. Conclusion. The obtained results suggest that NFB training exerts its effect on the processes of auditory cognition.
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- 2022
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7. Impulsive pile driving sound does not induce hearing loss in the longfin squid (Doryteuthis pealeii)a).
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Jézéquel Y and Mooney TA
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- Animals, Auditory Threshold, Sound, Acoustic Stimulation, Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced physiopathology, Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced etiology, Decapodiformes physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
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Offshore windfarms are a key means to produce clean energy as we seek to limit climate change effects. Impulsive pile driving used for their construction in shallow water environments is among the most intense anthropogenic sound sources. There is an increasing understanding that an array of marine invertebrates detects acoustic cues, yet little is known about how pile driving sound could impact their sound detection abilities. We experimentally quantified potential changes in sound sensitivity for an abundant, commercially and ecologically important squid species (Doryteuthis pealeii) exposed to actual in situ pile driving. The pile was 0.3-m diameter and 10-m long; hammer energy reached 16 kJ per strike. Sound detection thresholds were determined using auditory evoked potentials in animals with no exposure, after one 15-min or five repeated 15-min long pile driving sound sequences, corresponding to cumulative sound exposure levels of 110 and 131 dB re (1 μm s-2)2 s for acceleration and 187 and 214 dB re (1 μPa)2 s for pressure. We found no statistical evidence of temporary threshold shifts in any squid exposed to pile driving sound sequences. These results, combined with companion behavioral studies, suggest that squid may be robust to the sound impacts during offshore windfarm construction., (© 2024 Acoustical Society of America.)
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- 2024
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8. Physiological properties of auditory neurons responding to omission deviants in the anesthetized rat.
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Lao-Rodríguez AB, Pérez-González D, and Malmierca MS
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- Animals, Male, Auditory Perception physiology, Rats, Anesthesia, Neurons physiology, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Time Factors, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Acoustic Stimulation, Auditory Cortex physiology, Inferior Colliculi physiology, Auditory Pathways physiology
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The detection of novel, low probability events in the environment is critical for survival. To perform this vital task, our brain is continuously building and updating a model of the outside world; an extensively studied phenomenon commonly referred to as predictive coding. Predictive coding posits that the brain is continuously extracting regularities from the environment to generate predictions. These predictions are then used to supress neuronal responses to redundant information, filtering those inputs, which then automatically enhances the remaining, unexpected inputs. We have recently described the ability of auditory neurons to generate predictions about expected sensory inputs by detecting their absence in an oddball paradigm using omitted tones as deviants. Here, we studied the responses of individual neurons to omitted tones by presenting individual sequences of repetitive pure tones, using both random and periodic omissions, presented at both fast and slow rates in the inferior colliculus and auditory cortex neurons of anesthetized rats. Our goal was to determine whether feature-specific dependence of these predictions exists. Results showed that omitted tones could be detected at both high (8 Hz) and slow repetition rates (2 Hz), with detection being more robust at the non-lemniscal auditory pathway., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no competing interests., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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9. Experience with the cochlear implant enhances the neural tracking of spectrotemporal patterns in the Alberti bass.
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Celma-Miralles A, Seeberg AB, Haumann NT, Vuust P, and Petersen B
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- Humans, Female, Male, Middle Aged, Adult, Time Factors, Case-Control Studies, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Aged, Auditory Perception, Adaptation, Physiological, Pitch Perception, Cochlear Implants, Music, Acoustic Stimulation, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Electroencephalography
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Cochlear implant (CI) users experience diminished music enjoyment due to the technical limitations of the CI. Nonetheless, behavioral studies have reported that rhythmic features are well-transmitted through the CI. Still, the gradual improvement of rhythm perception after the CI switch-on has not yet been determined using neurophysiological measures. To fill this gap, we here reanalyzed the electroencephalographic responses of participants from two previous mismatch negativity studies. These studies included eight recently implanted CI users measured twice, within the first six weeks after CI switch-on and approximately three months later; thirteen experienced CI users with a median experience of 7 years; and fourteen normally hearing (NH) controls. All participants listened to a repetitive four-tone pattern (known in music as Alberti bass) for 35 min. Applying frequency tagging, we aimed to estimate the neural activity synchronized to the periodicities of the Alberti bass. We hypothesized that longer experience with the CI would be reflected in stronger frequency-tagged neural responses approaching the responses of NH controls. We found an increase in the frequency-tagged amplitudes after only 3 months of CI use. This increase in neural synchronization may reflect an early adaptation to the CI stimulation. Moreover, the frequency-tagged amplitudes of experienced CI users were significantly greater than those of recently implanted CI users, but still smaller than those of NH controls. The frequency-tagged neural responses did not just reflect spectrotemporal changes in the stimuli (i.e., intensity or spectral content fluctuating over time), but also showed non-linear transformations that seemed to enhance relevant periodicities of the Alberti bass. Our findings provide neurophysiological evidence indicating a gradual adaptation to the CI, which is noticeable already after three months, resulting in close to NH brain processing of spectrotemporal features of musical rhythms after extended CI use., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest All authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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10. Mismatch negativity between discriminating and undiscriminating participants on the front-back sound localization.
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Hishikawa K and Ogawa K
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- Humans, Male, Female, Young Adult, Adult, Time Factors, Brain physiology, Sound Localization physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Electroencephalography, Acoustic Stimulation, Reaction Time, Discrimination, Psychological
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Sound localization in the front-back dimension is reported to be challenging, with individual differences. We investigated whether auditory discrimination processing in the brain differs based on front-back sound localization ability. This study conducted an auditory oddball task using speakers in front of and behind the participants. We used event-related brain potentials to examine the deviance detection process between groups that could and could not discriminate front-back sound localization. The results indicated that mismatch negativity (MMN) occurred during the deviance detection process, and P2 amplitude differed between standard and deviant locations in both groups. However, the latency of MMN was shorter in the group that could discriminate front-back sounds than in the group that could not. Additionally, N1 amplitude increased for deviant locations compared to standard ones only in the discriminating group. In conclusion, the sensory memories matching process based on traces of previously presented stimuli (MMN, P2) occurred regardless of discrimination ability. However, the response to changes in the physical properties of sounds (MMN latency, N1 amplitude) differed depending on the ability to discriminate front-back sounds. Our findings suggest that the brain may have different processing strategies for the two directions even without subjective recognition of the front-back direction of incoming sounds., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None of the authors have potential conflicts of interest to be disclosed., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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11. Cortical auditory evoked potentials (P1 latency) in children with cochlear implants in relation to clinical language tests.
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Frånlund K, Lindehammar H, Mäki-Torkko E, and Hergils L
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- Humans, Male, Female, Child, Preschool, Cross-Sectional Studies, Child, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Language Development, Sweden, Infant, Cohort Studies, Reaction Time, Cochlear Implants, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Language Tests
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Objective - To study the correlation between P1 latency and the results of clinical language tests (Reynell III and TROG-2), the latter were used as they are recommended for follow-up assessments of children with cochlear implants (Cis) by the Swedish National Quality Register for children with hearing impairment. Design - A clinical cohort study. Study sample - Cross-sectional and consecutive sampling of 49 children with CIs coming for clinical follow-up assessment from March 2017 - December 2019. Results - For all children tested, there was a significant negative correlation (Spearman's rho= -0.403, p = 0.011) between hearing age and P1 latency. A significant correlation between P1 latency and the Reynell III result (Spearman's rho = -0.810, p = 0.015) was found. In the TROG-2 group, there was no significant correlation between their P1 latency and their language test results (Spearman's rho -0.239, p = 0.196). Conclusion - This method seems to be feasible and easily accepted. The study was conducted in a heterogeneous group of children that we meet daily in our clinic. The results indicated that P1 latency has a negative correlation with language development among our youngest patients fitted with CIs and might be a clinical tool to assess the maturation of central auditory pathways.
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- 2024
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12. An interpretable tinnitus prediction framework using gap-prepulse inhibition in auditory late response and electroencephalogram.
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Hussain I, Kwon C, Noh TS, Kim HC, Suh MW, and Ku Y
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Acoustic Stimulation, Machine Learning, Case-Control Studies, Cohort Studies, Aged, Tinnitus physiopathology, Tinnitus diagnosis, Electroencephalography methods, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
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Background and Objective: Tinnitus is a neuropathological condition that results in mild buzzing or ringing of the ears without an external sound source. Current tinnitus diagnostic methods often rely on subjective assessment and require intricate medical examinations. This study aimed to propose an interpretable tinnitus diagnostic framework using auditory late response (ALR) and electroencephalogram (EEG), inspired by the gap-prepulse inhibition (GPI) paradigm., Methods: We collected spontaneous EEG and ALR data from 44 patients with tinnitus and 47 hearing loss-matched controls using specialized hardware to capture responses to sound stimuli with embedded gaps. In this cohort study of tinnitus and control groups, we examined EEG spectral and ALR features of N-P complexes, comparing the responses to gap durations of 50 and 20 ms alongside no-gap conditions. To this end, we developed an interpretable tinnitus diagnostic model using ALR and EEG metrics, boosting machine learning architecture, and explainable feature attribution approaches., Results: Our proposed model achieved 90 % accuracy in identifying tinnitus, with an area under the performance curve of 0.89. The explainable artificial intelligence approaches have revealed gap-embedded ALR features such as the GPI ratio of N1-P2 and EEG spectral ratio, which can serve as diagnostic metrics for tinnitus. Our method successfully provides personalized prediction explanations for tinnitus diagnosis using gap-embedded auditory and neurological features., Conclusions: Deficits in GPI alongside activity in the EEG alpha-beta ratio offer a promising screening tool for assessing tinnitus risk, aligning with current clinical insights from hearing research., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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13. Biomarkers of auditory cortical plasticity and development of binaural pathways in children with unilateral hearing loss using a hearing aid.
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Kaplan-Neeman R, Greenbom T, Habiballah S, and Henkin Y
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Adolescent, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Correction of Hearing Impairment, Electroencephalography, Age Factors, Biomarkers, Hearing, Hearing Aids, Neuronal Plasticity, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Hearing Loss, Unilateral physiopathology, Hearing Loss, Unilateral rehabilitation, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Speech Perception, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Acoustic Stimulation
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Congenital or early-onset unilateral hearing loss (UHL) can disrupt the normal development of the auditory system. In extreme cases of UHL (i.e., single sided deafness), consistent cochlear implant use during sensitive periods resulted in cortical reorganization that partially reversed the detrimental effects of unilateral sensory deprivation. There is a gap in knowledge, however, regarding cortical plasticity i.e. the brain's capacity to adapt, reorganize, and develop binaural pathways in milder degrees of UHL rehabilitated by a hearing aid (HA). The current study was set to investigate early-stage cortical processing and electrophysiological manifestations of binaural processing by means of cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) to speech sounds, in children with moderate to severe-to-profound UHL using a HA. Fourteen children with UHL (CHwUHL), 6-14 years old consistently using a HA for 3.5 (±2.3) years participated in the study. CAEPs were elicited to the speech sounds /m/, /g/, and /t/ in three listening conditions: monaural [Normal hearing (NH), HA], and bilateral [BI (NH + HA)]. Results indicated age-appropriate CAEP morphology in the NH and BI listening conditions in all children. In the HA listening condition: (1) CAEPs showed similar morphology to that found in the NH listening condition, however, the mature morphology observed in older children in the NH listening condition was not evident; (2) P1 was elicited in all but two children with severe-to-profound hearing loss, to at least one speech stimuli, indicating effective audibility; (3) A significant mismatch in timing and synchrony between the NH and HA ear was found; (4) P1 was sensitive to the acoustic features of the eliciting stimulus and to the amplification characteristics of the HA. Finally, a cortical binaural interaction component (BIC) was derived in most children. In conclusion, the current study provides first-time evidence for cortical plasticity and partial reversal of the detrimental effects of moderate to severe-to-profound UHL rehabilitated by a HA. The derivation of a cortical biomarker of binaural processing implies that functional binaural pathways can develop when sufficient auditory input is provided to the affected ear. CAEPs may thus serve as a clinical tool for assessing, monitoring, and managing CHwUHL using a HA., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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14. A systematic review of acoustic change complex (ACC) measurements and applicability in children for the assessment of the neural capacity for sound and speech discrimination.
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Meehan S, Adank ML, van der Schroeff MP, and Vroegop JL
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- Adolescent, Child, Child, Preschool, Female, Humans, Infant, Male, Age Factors, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Auditory Pathways physiology, Hearing, Hearing Loss physiopathology, Hearing Loss diagnosis, Hearing Loss rehabilitation, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Predictive Value of Tests, Reproducibility of Results, Speech Discrimination Tests, Acoustic Stimulation, Auditory Perception, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
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Objective: The acoustic change complex (ACC) is a cortical auditory evoked potential (CAEP) and can be elicited by a change in an otherwise continuous sound. The ACC has been highlighted as a promising tool in the assessment of sound and speech discrimination capacity, and particularly for difficult-to-test populations such as infants with hearing loss, due to the objective nature of ACC measurements. Indeed, there is a pressing need to develop further means to accurately and thoroughly establish the hearing status of children with hearing loss, to help guide hearing interventions in a timely manner. Despite the potential of the ACC method, ACC measurements remain relatively rare in a standard clinical settings. The objective of this study was to perform an up-to-date systematic review on ACC measurements in children, to provide greater clarity and consensus on the possible methodologies, applications, and performance of this technique, and to facilitate its uptake in relevant clinical settings., Design: Original peer-reviewed articles conducting ACC measurements in children (< 18 years). Data were extracted and summarised for: (1) participant characteristics; (2) ACC methods and auditory stimuli; (3) information related to the performance of the ACC technique; (4) ACC measurement outcomes, advantages, and challenges. The systematic review was conducted using PRISMA guidelines for reporting and the methodological quality of included articles was assessed., Results: A total of 28 studies were identified (9 infant studies). Review results show that ACC responses can be measured in infants (from < 3 months), and there is evidence of age-dependency, including increased robustness of the ACC response with increasing childhood age. Clinical applications include the measurement of the neural capacity for speech and non-speech sound discrimination in children with hearing loss, auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) and central auditory processing disorder (CAPD). Additionally, ACCs can be recorded in children with hearing aids, auditory brainstem implants, and cochlear implants, and ACC results may guide hearing intervention/rehabilitation strategies. The review identified that the time taken to perform ACC measurements was often lengthy; the development of more efficient ACC test procedures for children would be beneficial. Comparisons between objective ACC measurements and behavioural measures of sound discrimination showed significant correlations for some, but not all, included studies., Conclusions: ACC measurements of the neural capacity to discriminate between speech and non-speech sounds are feasible in infants and children, and a wide range of possible clinical applications exist, although more time-efficient procedures would be advantageous for clinical uptake. A consideration of age and maturational effects is recommended, and further research is required to investigate the relationship between objective ACC measures and behavioural measures of sound and speech perception for effective clinical implementation., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None (the authors have no financial disclosures or competing interests to disclose)., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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15. The temporal mismatch across listening sides affects cortical auditory evoked responses in normal hearing listeners and cochlear implant users with contralateral acoustic hearing.
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Dolhopiatenko H, Segovia-Martinez M, and Nogueira W
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Aged, Young Adult, Time Factors, Reaction Time, Case-Control Studies, Hearing, Electroencephalography, Auditory Threshold, Auditory Perception, Cochlear Implants, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Acoustic Stimulation, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Speech Perception, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Electric Stimulation
- Abstract
Combining a cochlear implant with contralateral acoustic hearing typically enhances speech understanding, although this improvement varies among CI users and can lead to an interference effect. This variability may be associated with the effectiveness of the integration between electric and acoustic stimulation, which might be affected by the temporal mismatch between the two listening sides. Finding methods to compensate for the temporal mismatch might contribute to the optimal adjustment of bimodal devices and to improve hearing in CI users with contralateral acoustic hearing. The current study investigates cortical auditory evoked potentials (CAEPs) in normal hearing listeners (NH) and CI users with contralateral acoustic hearing. In NH, the amplitude of the N1 peak and the maximum phase locking value (PLV) were analyzed under monaural, binaural, and binaural temporally mismatched conditions. In CI users, CAEPs were measured when listening with CI only (CIS_only), acoustically only (AS_only) and with both sides together (CIS+AS). When listening with CIS+AS, various interaural delays were introduced between the electric and acoustic stimuli. In NH listeners, interaural temporal mismatch resulted in decreased N1 amplitude and PLV. Moreover, PLV is suggested as a more sensitive measure to investigate the integration of information between the two listening sides. CI users showed varied N1 latencies between the AS_only and CIS_only listening conditions, with increased N1 amplitude when the temporal mismatch was compensated. A tendency towards increased PLV was also observed, however, to a lesser extent than in NH listeners, suggesting a limited integration between electric and acoustic stimulation. This work highlights the potential of CAEPs measurement to investigate cortical processing of the information between two listening sides in NH and bimodal CI users., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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16. Lower frequency range of auditory input facilitates stream segregation in older adults.
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Dinces E and Sussman ES
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- Humans, Aged, Male, Female, Adult, Young Adult, Age Factors, Middle Aged, Auditory Threshold, Auditory Pathways physiology, Hearing, Acoustic Stimulation, Electroencephalography, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Auditory Perception physiology
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The current study investigated the effect of lower frequency input on stream segregation acuity in older, normal hearing adults. Using event-related brain potentials (ERPs) and perceptual performance measures, we previously showed that stream segregation abilities were less proficient in older compared to younger adults. However, in that study we used frequency ranges greater than 1500 Hz. In the current study, we lowered the target frequency range below 1500 Hz and found similar stream segregation abilities in younger and older adults. These results indicate that the perception of complex auditory scenes is influenced by the spectral content of the auditory input and suggest that lower frequency ranges of input in older adults may facilitate listening ability in complex auditory environments. These results also have implications for the advancement of prosthetic devices., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest None, (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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17. Parallel EEG assessment of different sound predictability levels in tinnitus.
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Brinkmann P, Devos JVP, van der Eerden JHM, Smit JV, Janssen MLF, Kotz SA, and Schwartze M
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Case-Control Studies, Principal Component Analysis, Sensory Gating, Auditory Perception, Time Factors, Young Adult, Aged, Pitch Perception, Tinnitus physiopathology, Tinnitus diagnosis, Electroencephalography, Acoustic Stimulation, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
- Abstract
Tinnitus denotes the perception of a non-environmental sound and might result from aberrant auditory prediction. Successful prediction of formal (e.g., type) and temporal sound characteristics facilitates the filtering of irrelevant information, also labelled as 'sensory gating' (SG). Here, we explored if and how parallel manipulations of formal prediction violations and temporal predictability affect SG in persons with and without tinnitus. Age-, education- and sex-matched persons with and without tinnitus (N = 52) participated and listened to paired-tone oddball sequences, varying in formal (standard vs. deviant pitch) and temporal predictability (isochronous vs. random timing). EEG was recorded from 128 channels and data were analyzed by means of temporal spatial principal component analysis (tsPCA). SG was assessed by amplitude suppression for the 2nd tone in a pair and was observed in P50-like activity in both timing conditions and groups. Correspondingly, deviants elicited overall larger amplitudes than standards. However, only persons without tinnitus displayed a larger N100-like deviance response in the isochronous compared to the random timing condition. This result might imply that persons with tinnitus do not benefit similarly as persons without tinnitus from temporal predictability in deviance processing. Thus, persons with tinnitus might display less temporal sensitivity in auditory processing than persons without tinnitus., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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18. Layer-specific enhancement of visual-evoked activity in the audiovisual cortex following a mild degree of hearing loss in adult rats.
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Schormans AL and Allman BL
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- Animals, Male, Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced physiopathology, Visual Perception, Auditory Perception, Noise adverse effects, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Rats, Hearing, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Visual Cortex physiopathology, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Neuronal Plasticity, Acoustic Stimulation, Photic Stimulation, Evoked Potentials, Visual, Disease Models, Animal
- Abstract
Following adult-onset hearing impairment, crossmodal plasticity can occur within various sensory cortices, often characterized by increased neural responses to visual stimulation in not only the auditory cortex, but also in the visual and audiovisual cortices. In the present study, we used an established model of loud noise exposure in rats to examine, for the first time, whether the crossmodal plasticity in the audiovisual cortex that occurs following a relatively mild degree of hearing loss emerges solely from altered intracortical processing or if thalamocortical changes also contribute to the crossmodal effects. Using a combination of an established pharmacological 'cortical silencing' protocol and current source density analysis of the laminar activity recorded across the layers of the audiovisual cortex (i.e., the lateral extrastriate visual cortex, V2L), we observed layer-specific changes post-silencing in the strength of the residual visual, but not auditory, input in the noise exposed rats with mild hearing loss compared to rats with normal hearing. Furthermore, based on a comparison of the laminar profiles pre- versus post-silencing in both groups, we can conclude that noise exposure caused a re-allocation of the strength of visual inputs across the layers of the V2L cortex, including enhanced visual-evoked activity in the granular layer; findings consistent with thalamocortical plasticity. Finally, we confirmed that audiovisual integration within the V2L cortex depends on intact processing within intracortical circuits, and that this form of multisensory processing is vulnerable to disruption by noise-induced hearing loss. Ultimately, the present study furthers our understanding of the contribution of intracortical and thalamocortical processing to crossmodal plasticity as well as to audiovisual integration under both normal and mildly-impaired hearing conditions., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that there are no conflicts of interest regarding the publication of this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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19. Binaural responses to a speech syllable are altered in children with hearing loss: Evidence from the frequency-following response.
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Alemu RZ, Gorodensky J, Gill S, Cushing SL, Papsin BC, and Gordon KA
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- Humans, Child, Male, Female, Adolescent, Case-Control Studies, Hearing Loss, Bilateral physiopathology, Hearing Loss, Bilateral psychology, Hearing Loss, Bilateral diagnosis, Hearing Aids, Time Factors, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Age Factors, Sound Localization, Hearing, Speech Acoustics, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Electroencephalography, Speech Perception, Cues, Acoustic Stimulation
- Abstract
Background & Rationale: In prior work using non-speech stimuli, children with hearing loss show impaired perception of binaural cues and no significant change in cortical responses to bilateral versus unilateral stimulation. Aims of the present study were to: 1) identify bilateral responses to envelope and spectral components of a speech syllable using the frequency-following response (FFR), 2) determine if abnormalities in the bilateral FFR occur in children with hearing loss, and 3) assess functional consequences of abnormal bilateral FFR responses on perception of binaural timing cues., Methods: A single-syllable speech stimulus (/dα/) was presented to each ear individually and bilaterally. Participants were 9 children with normal hearing (M
Age = 12.1 ± 2.5 years) and 6 children with bilateral hearing loss who were experienced bilateral hearing aid users (MAge = 14.0 ± 2.6 years). FFR temporal and spectral peak amplitudes were compared between listening conditions and groups using linear mixed model regression analyses. Behavioral sensitivity to binaural cues were measured by lateralization responses as coming from the right or left side of the head., Results: Both temporal and spectral peaks in FFR responses increased in amplitude in the bilateral compared to unilateral listening conditions in children with normal hearing. These measures of "bilateral advantage" were reduced in the group of children with bilateral hearing loss and associated with decreased sensitivity to interaural timing differences., Conclusion: This study is the first to show that bilateral responses in both temporal and spectral domains can be measured in children using the FFR and is altered in children with hearing loss with consequences to binaural hearing., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2024
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20. Central auditory processing: behavioral and electrophysiological assessment of children and adolescents diagnosed with stroke
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Amanda Zanatta Berticelli, Claudine Devicari Bueno, Vanessa Onzi Rocha, Josiane Ranzan, Rudimar dos Santos Riesgo, and Pricila Sleifer
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Stroke ,Evoked potentials, auditory ,Auditory perceptual disorders ,Auditory diseases, central ,Child ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
Introduction: Central auditory processing refers to the efficiency and effectiveness with which the central nervous system uses auditory information: it may be altered in neurological disorders and brain injuries, such as strokes. However, despite evidence of probable alterations in the pediatric population, functional abilities and post-stroke limitations are still not well documented in the literature. Objective: To analyze the findings of the electrophysiological and behavioral evaluations of central auditory processing of children and adolescents diagnosed with stroke from a reference outpatient clinic, as well as to investigate possible associations with the variables: type and location of the stroke and age group. Methods: The present study is characterized as comparative cross-sectional. The sample, for convenience, included individuals aged 7–18 years divided into two groups: study group, composed of individuals with a diagnosis of stroke, and control group, composed of individuals with typical development. The evaluation consisted of the following procedures: anamnesis, basic audiological evaluation, behavioral evaluation of the auditory processing disorder (dichotic digit test, dichotic consonant-vowel, synthetic sentence identification/pediatric speech intelligibility, gaps in noise, pitch pattern sequence, masking level difference), and electrophysiological evaluation (P300 and mismatch negativity). Results: Nineteen children and adolescents were included in the study group. The control group was composed of 19 children and adolescents with typical development. In the comparison between the groups, a worse performance is observed for the study group in all the evaluated tests, behavioral and electrophysiological. In the behavioral evaluation of central auditory processing, there was a statistical difference for all tests, except for masking level difference and dichotic digit test, binaural separation step on the left. In the electrophysiological evaluation, there was a statistical difference in the latency of mismatch negativity and P300. No associations were found between the behavioral and electrophysiological findings and the location of the stroke and age group variables. Conclusion: Children and adolescents diagnosed with stroke present a worse performance in the electrophysiological and behavioral evaluations of central auditory processing when compared to a control group.
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- 2021
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21. Implications of musical practice in central auditory processing: a systematic review
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Cinthya Heloisa Braz, Laura Faustino Gonçalves, Karina Mary Paiva, Patricia Haas, and Fernanda Soares Aurélio Patatt
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Music ,Hearing ,Auditory pathways ,Auditory perception ,Evoked potentials, auditory ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
Introduction: Recent studies have shown that musical practice and training are effective and have the potential to assist in the acquisition and improvement of auditory skills. Objective: To verify the scientific evidence on the implications of musical practice in central auditory processing. Methods: A systematic review was carried out in accordance with the recommendations of the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA), using the Medline (Pubmed), LILACS, SciELO, BIREME, Scopus and Web of Science databases. The search period for the articles covered the last 5 years (2015–2020), without restriction of language and location. The quality of the articles was assessed, and the review included articles with a minimum score of 6 in a modified literature quality scale. Results: Initially, 1362 publications were found, of which 1338 were excluded after the title screening, 15 were excluded due to the abstract, with nine articles being analyzed in full and four of them excluded after the analysis, as they did not answer the guiding question proposed for this research. Five articles that met the proposed inclusion criteria were admitted for this research. It was found that in adults, musical ability is associated with better performance of several auditory processing skills, as well as the fact that musical training in children promoted an accelerated maturity of auditory processing and exposure to music facilitated the learning of auditory information in newborns. Conclusion: Considering the scientific evidence, it was found that the musical experience can improve specific skills of the central auditory processing, regardless of age, optimizing children’s linguistic development.
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- 2021
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22. Aging process and central auditory pathway: a study based on auditory brainstem evoked potential and frequency-following response
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Daniélli Rampelotto Tessele, Bruna Pias Peixe, Taissane Rodrigues Sanguebuche, Vitor Cantele Malavolta, Michele Vargas Garcia, and Milaine Dominicini Sanfins
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Hearing ,Evoked potentials, auditory ,Hearing loss ,Electrophysiology ,Adult ,Aging ,Medicine - Abstract
ABSTRACT Objective To analyze age-related changes in the central auditory pathway in healthy elderly individuals. Methods A prospective, quantitative cross-sectional study. The caseload comprised 18 adults (mean age, 22.78 years) and 18 elderly individuals (mean age, 66.72 years) of both sexes, who met inclusion criteria. Subjects were submitted to basic audiological evaluation and related electrophysiologic tests: brainstem auditory evoked potential with click stimulus and frequency-following response. Results Elderly individuals had higher wave and interpeak latencies (waves I, III and V and interpeaks I-V and III-V) of brainstem auditory evoked potential. Latencies of frequency following response waves A, E, F and O were also higher in elderly individuals. Frequency following response amplitudes were better in A than in D, F and O waves in these subjects. Likewise, interpeak intervals (V-A and V-O) were larger in elderly relative to adult individuals. Lower slope values were observed in elderly individuals. Conclusion Brainstem auditory evoked potential and frequency-following response allowed appropriate assessment of age-related changes in the auditory pathway. Slower neural response to auditory stimuli suggests reduced synchrony between neural structures.
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- 2022
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23. Peripheral and brainstem auditory evaluation in post-COVID-19 individuals.
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Mielle LP, Maximiano MVA, Neves-Lobo IF, Silva LAF, Goulart AC, Romagnolli C, de Oliveira GSS, Samelli AG, and Matas CG
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- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Middle Aged, Young Adult, SARS-CoV-2, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural etiology, Hearing Loss, Sensorineural physiopathology, Auditory Threshold physiology, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Surveys and Questionnaires, COVID-19 complications, COVID-19 physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem physiology, Audiometry, Pure-Tone
- Abstract
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate the peripheral and central auditory pathways in adult individuals after COVID-19 infection., Method: A total of 44 individuals aged between 19 and 58 years, of both genders, post-COVID-19 infection, confirmed by serological tests, with no previous hearing complaints and no risk factors for hearing loss, were assessed. All the participants underwent the following procedures: pure tone audiometry, logoaudiometry, immitanciometry, and Brainstem Auditory Evoked Potentials (BAEP), in addition to answering a questionnaire about auditory symptoms., Results: Thirteen individuals (29.5 %) had some hearing threshold impairment, mainly sensorineural hearing loss. In the BAEP, 18 individuals (40.9 %) presented longer latencies, mainly in waves III and V. According to the questionnaire answers, 3 individuals (9.1 %) reported worsened hearing and 7 (15.9 %) tinnitus that emerged after the infection. As for the use of ototoxic drugs during treatment, 7 individuals (15.9 %) reported their use, of which 5 showed abnormalities in peripheral and/or central auditory assessments., Conclusion: Considering the self-reported hearing complaints after COVID-19 infection and the high rate of abnormalities found in both peripheral and central audiological assessments, it is suggested that the new COVID-19 may compromise the auditory system. Due to the many variables involved in this study, the results should be considered with caution. However, it is essential that audiological evaluations are carried out on post-COVID-19 patients in order to assess the effects of the infection in the short, medium, and long term. Future longitudinal investigations are important for a better understanding of the auditory consequences of COVID-19., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U.)
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- 2024
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24. Tinnitus mechanisms and the need for an objective electrophysiological tinnitus test.
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Fabrizio-Stover EM, Oliver DL, and Burghard AL
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- Humans, Animals, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Auditory Perception, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Predictive Value of Tests, Electrophysiological Phenomena, Tinnitus physiopathology, Tinnitus diagnosis, Acoustic Stimulation
- Abstract
Tinnitus, the perception of sound with no external auditory stimulus, is a complex, multifaceted, and potentially devastating disorder. Despite recent advances in our understanding of tinnitus, there are limited options for effective treatment. Tinnitus treatments are made more complicated by the lack of a test for tinnitus based on objectively measured physiological characteristics. Such an objective test would enable a greater understanding of tinnitus mechanisms and may lead to faster treatment development in both animal and human research. This review makes the argument that an objective tinnitus test, such as a non-invasive electrophysiological measure, is desperately needed. We review the current tinnitus assessment methods, the underlying neural correlates of tinnitus, the multiple tinnitus generation theories, and the previously investigated electrophysiological measurements of tinnitus. Finally, we propose an alternate objective test for tinnitus that may be valid in both animal and human subjects., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have a patent pending for the development of a ‘long-duration sound test’ that could be used as a tool to test for tinnitus., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Congenital deafness reduces alpha-gamma cross-frequency coupling in the auditory cortex.
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Yusuf PA, Hubka P, Konerding W, Land R, Tillein J, and Kral A
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- Animals, Cats, Cochlear Implants, Alpha Rhythm, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Algorithms, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Disease Models, Animal, Theta Rhythm, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Deafness physiopathology, Deafness congenital, Acoustic Stimulation, Gamma Rhythm
- Abstract
Neurons within a neuronal network can be grouped by bottom-up and top-down influences using synchrony in neuronal oscillations. This creates the representation of perceptual objects from sensory features. Oscillatory activity can be differentiated into stimulus-phase-locked (evoked) and non-phase-locked (induced). The former is mainly determined by sensory input, the latter by higher-level (cortical) processing. Effects of auditory deprivation on cortical oscillations have been studied in congenitally deaf cats (CDCs) using cochlear implant (CI) stimulation. CI-induced alpha, beta, and gamma activity were compromised in the auditory cortex of CDCs. Furthermore, top-down information flow between secondary and primary auditory areas in hearing cats, conveyed by induced alpha oscillations, was lost in CDCs. Here we used the matching pursuit algorithm to assess components of such oscillatory activity in local field potentials recorded in primary field A1. Additionally to the loss of induced alpha oscillations, we also found a loss of evoked theta activity in CDCs. The loss of theta and alpha activity in CDCs can be directly related to reduced high-frequency (gamma-band) activity due to cross-frequency coupling. Here we quantified such cross-frequency coupling in adult 1) hearing-experienced, acoustically stimulated cats (aHCs), 2) hearing-experienced cats following acute pharmacological deafening and subsequent CIs, thus in electrically stimulated cats (eHCs), and 3) electrically stimulated CDCs. We found significant cross-frequency coupling in all animal groups in > 70% of auditory-responsive sites. The predominant coupling in aHCs and eHCs was between theta/alpha phase and gamma power. In CDCs such coupling was lost and replaced by alpha oscillations coupling to delta/theta phase. Thus, alpha/theta oscillations synchronize high-frequency gamma activity only in hearing-experienced cats. The absence of induced alpha and theta oscillations contributes to the loss of induced gamma power in CDCs, thereby signifying impaired local network activity., (Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. Aging effects on the neural representation and perception of consonant transition cues.
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Poe AA, Karawani H, and Anderson S
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- Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Young Adult, Aged, Middle Aged, Age Factors, Auditory Threshold, Electroencephalography, Time Factors, Auditory Pathways physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Cues, Aging physiology, Aging psychology, Acoustic Stimulation, Speech Perception physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem, Auditory Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Older listeners have difficulty processing temporal cues that are important for word discrimination, and deficient processing may limit their ability to benefit from these cues. Here, we investigated aging effects on perception and neural representation of the consonant transition and the factors that contribute to successful perception. To further understand the neural mechanisms underlying the changes in processing from brainstem to cortex, we also examined the factors that contribute to exaggerated amplitudes in cortex. We enrolled 30 younger normal-hearing and 30 older normal-hearing participants who met the criteria of clinically normal hearing. Perceptual identification functions were obtained for the words BEAT and WHEAT on a 7-step continuum of consonant-transition duration. Auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) were recorded to click stimuli and frequency-following responses (FFRs) and cortical auditory-evoked potentials were recorded to the endpoints of the BEAT-WHEAT continuum. Perceptual performance for identification of BEAT vs. WHEAT did not differ between younger and older listeners. However, both subcortical and cortical measures of neural representation showed age group differences, such that FFR phase locking was lower but cortical amplitudes (P1 and N1) were higher in older compared to younger listeners. ABR Wave I amplitude and FFR phase locking, but not audiometric thresholds, predicted early cortical amplitudes. Phase locking to the transition region and early cortical peak amplitudes (P1) predicted performance on the perceptual identification function. Overall, results suggest that the neural representation of transition durations and cortical overcompensation may contribute to the ability to perceive transition duration contrasts. Cortical overcompensation appears to be a maladaptive response to decreased neural firing/synchrony., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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27. Optogenetic inhibition of the limbic corticothalamic circuit does not alter spontaneous oscillatory activity, auditory-evoked oscillations, and deviant detection.
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Gonzalez-Burgos I, Valencia M, Redondo R, and Janz P
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- Animals, Rats, Male, Schizophrenia physiopathology, Neural Pathways, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Gamma Rhythm physiology, Limbic System physiology, Optogenetics methods, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Thalamus physiology
- Abstract
Aberrant neuronal circuit dynamics are at the core of complex neuropsychiatric disorders, such as schizophrenia (SZ). Clinical assessment of the integrity of neuronal circuits in SZ has consistently described aberrant resting-state gamma oscillatory activity, decreased auditory-evoked gamma responses, and abnormal mismatch responses. We hypothesized that corticothalamic circuit manipulation could recapitulate SZ circuit phenotypes in rodent models. In this study, we optogenetically inhibited the mediodorsal thalamus-to-prefrontal cortex (MDT-to-PFC) or the PFC-to-MDT projection in rats and assessed circuit function through electrophysiological readouts. We found that MDT-PFC perturbation could not recapitulate SZ-linked phenotypes such as broadband gamma disruption, altered evoked oscillatory activity, and diminished mismatch negativity responses. Therefore, the induced functional impairment of the MDT-PFC pathways cannot account for the oscillatory abnormalities described in SZ., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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28. Asymmetric pulses delivered by a cochlear implant allow a reduction in evoked firing rate and in spatial activation in the guinea pig auditory cortex.
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Adenis V, Partouche E, Stahl P, Gnansia D, Huetz C, and Edeline JM
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- Animals, Guinea Pigs, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Cochlear Nerve physiopathology, Acoustic Stimulation, Cochlea surgery, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Action Potentials, Female, Cochlear Implants, Auditory Cortex physiology, Electric Stimulation
- Abstract
Despite that fact that the cochlear implant (CI) is one of the most successful neuro-prosthetic devices which allows hearing restoration, several aspects still need to be improved. Interactions between stimulating electrodes through current spread occurring within the cochlea drastically limit the number of discriminable frequency channels and thus can ultimately result in poor speech perception. One potential solution relies on the use of new pulse shapes, such as asymmetric pulses, which can potentially reduce the current spread within the cochlea. The present study characterized the impact of changing electrical pulse shapes from the standard biphasic symmetric to the asymmetrical shape by quantifying the evoked firing rate and the spatial activation in the guinea pig primary auditory cortex (A1). At a fixed charge, the firing rate and the spatial activation in A1 decreased by 15 to 25 % when asymmetric pulses were used to activate the auditory nerve fibers, suggesting a potential reduction of the spread of excitation inside the cochlea. A strong "polarity-order" effect was found as the reduction was more pronounced when the first phase of the pulse was cathodic with high amplitude. These results suggest that the use of asymmetrical pulse shapes in clinical settings can potentially reduce the channel interactions in CI users., (Copyright © 2024 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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29. Effects of age and noise exposure history on auditory nerve response amplitudes: A systematic review, study, and meta-analysis.
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Dias JW, McClaskey CM, Alvey AP, Lawson A, Matthews LJ, Dubno JR, and Harris KC
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- Humans, Aged, Middle Aged, Adult, Aged, 80 and over, Age Factors, Young Adult, Adolescent, Aging physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Hearing Loss, Noise-Induced physiopathology, Female, Male, Animals, Action Potentials, Noise adverse effects, Cochlear Nerve physiopathology, Acoustic Stimulation
- Abstract
Auditory nerve (AN) function has been hypothesized to deteriorate with age and noise exposure. Here, we perform a systematic review of published studies and find that the evidence for age-related deficits in AN function is largely consistent across the literature, but there are inconsistent findings among studies of noise exposure history. Further, evidence from animal studies suggests that the greatest deficits in AN response amplitudes are found in noise-exposed aged mice, but a test of the interaction between effects of age and noise exposure on AN function has not been conducted in humans. We report a study of our own examining differences in the response amplitude of the compound action potential N1 (CAP N1) between younger and older adults with and without a self-reported history of noise exposure in a large sample of human participants (63 younger adults 18-30 years of age, 103 older adults 50-86 years of age). CAP N1 response amplitudes were smaller in older than younger adults. Noise exposure history did not appear to predict CAP N1 response amplitudes, nor did the effect of noise exposure history interact with age. We then incorporated our results into two meta-analyses of published studies of age and noise exposure history effects on AN response amplitudes in neurotypical human samples. The meta-analyses found that age effects across studies are robust (r = -0.407), but noise exposure effects are weak (r = -0.152). We conclude that noise exposure effects may be highly variable depending on sample characteristics, study design, and statistical approach, and researchers should be cautious when interpreting results. The underlying pathology of age-related and noise-induced changes in AN function are difficult to determine in living humans, creating a need for longitudinal studies of changes in AN function across the lifespan and histological examination of the AN from temporal bones collected post-mortem., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare no competing financial interests., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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30. Changes in visually and auditory attended audiovisual speech processing in cochlear implant users: A longitudinal ERP study.
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Weglage A, Layer N, Meister H, Müller V, Lang-Roth R, Walger M, and Sandmann P
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- Humans, Male, Female, Middle Aged, Adult, Prospective Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Case-Control Studies, Aged, Visual Perception, Lipreading, Time Factors, Hearing, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Evoked Potentials, Cochlear Implants, Speech Perception, Cochlear Implantation instrumentation, Electroencephalography, Acoustic Stimulation, Persons With Hearing Impairments psychology, Persons With Hearing Impairments rehabilitation, Deafness physiopathology, Deafness rehabilitation, Deafness psychology, Attention, Photic Stimulation
- Abstract
Limited auditory input, whether caused by hearing loss or by electrical stimulation through a cochlear implant (CI), can be compensated by the remaining senses. Specifically for CI users, previous studies reported not only improved visual skills, but also altered cortical processing of unisensory visual and auditory stimuli. However, in multisensory scenarios, it is still unclear how auditory deprivation (before implantation) and electrical hearing experience (after implantation) affect cortical audiovisual speech processing. Here, we present a prospective longitudinal electroencephalography (EEG) study which systematically examined the deprivation- and CI-induced alterations of cortical processing of audiovisual words by comparing event-related potentials (ERPs) in postlingually deafened CI users before and after implantation (five weeks and six months of CI use). A group of matched normal-hearing (NH) listeners served as controls. The participants performed a word-identification task with congruent and incongruent audiovisual words, focusing their attention on either the visual (lip movement) or the auditory speech signal. This allowed us to study the (top-down) attention effect on the (bottom-up) sensory cortical processing of audiovisual speech. When compared to the NH listeners, the CI candidates (before implantation) and the CI users (after implantation) exhibited enhanced lipreading abilities and an altered cortical response at the N1 latency range (90-150 ms) that was characterized by a decreased theta oscillation power (4-8 Hz) and a smaller amplitude in the auditory cortex. After implantation, however, the auditory-cortex response gradually increased and developed a stronger intra-modal connectivity. Nevertheless, task efficiency and activation in the visual cortex was significantly modulated in both groups by focusing attention on the visual as compared to the auditory speech signal, with the NH listeners additionally showing an attention-dependent decrease in beta oscillation power (13-30 Hz). In sum, these results suggest remarkable deprivation effects on audiovisual speech processing in the auditory cortex, which partially reverse after implantation. Although even experienced CI users still show distinct audiovisual speech processing compared to NH listeners, pronounced effects of (top-down) direction of attention on (bottom-up) audiovisual processing can be observed in both groups. However, NH listeners but not CI users appear to show enhanced allocation of cognitive resources in visually as compared to auditory attended audiovisual speech conditions, which supports our behavioural observations of poorer lipreading abilities and reduced visual influence on audition in NH listeners as compared to CI users., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier B.V.)
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- 2024
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31. Neuronal plasticity of the auditory pathway in children with speech sound disorder: a study of Long-Latency Auditory Evoked Potentials.
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Luna, Amanda Cristina, Fagundes Silva, Liliane Aparecida, Barrozo, Tatiane Faria, Leite, Renata Aparecida, Wertzner, Haydée Fiszbein, and Matas, Carla Gentile
- Published
- 2021
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32. Spatiotemporal brain hierarchies of auditory memory recognition and predictive coding.
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Bonetti L, Fernández-Rubio G, Carlomagno F, Dietz M, Pantazis D, Vuust P, and Kringelbach ML
- Subjects
- Humans, Music, Magnetoencephalography, Multivariate Analysis, Pattern Recognition, Physiological, Prefrontal Cortex physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Male, Female, Adult, Middle Aged, Auditory Perception, Auditory Pathways, Memory, Auditory Cortex physiology, Gyrus Cinguli physiology, Hippocampus physiology
- Abstract
Our brain is constantly extracting, predicting, and recognising key spatiotemporal features of the physical world in order to survive. While neural processing of visuospatial patterns has been extensively studied, the hierarchical brain mechanisms underlying conscious recognition of auditory sequences and the associated prediction errors remain elusive. Using magnetoencephalography (MEG), we describe the brain functioning of 83 participants during recognition of previously memorised musical sequences and systematic variations. The results show feedforward connections originating from auditory cortices, and extending to the hippocampus, anterior cingulate gyrus, and medial cingulate gyrus. Simultaneously, we observe backward connections operating in the opposite direction. Throughout the sequences, the hippocampus and cingulate gyrus maintain the same hierarchical level, except for the final tone, where the cingulate gyrus assumes the top position within the hierarchy. The evoked responses of memorised sequences and variations engage the same hierarchical brain network but systematically differ in terms of temporal dynamics, strength, and polarity. Furthermore, induced-response analysis shows that alpha and beta power is stronger for the variations, while gamma power is enhanced for the memorised sequences. This study expands on the predictive coding theory by providing quantitative evidence of hierarchical brain mechanisms during conscious memory and predictive processing of auditory sequences., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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33. Maternal COVID-19 during third trimester pregnancy does not alter brain-stem auditory evoked potentials in infants.
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Verdaguer L, Santa-Cruz DI, Angeles Sanchez Roldán M, Thonon V, Frick MA, Rahnama K, Agusti IR, and Moncho D
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- Infant, Pregnancy, Female, Humans, Pregnancy Trimester, Third, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem physiology, Brain, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, COVID-19
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- 2024
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34. Brain auditory evoked potentials in pediatric Intensive Care Unit: diagnostic role on encephalopathy and central respiratory failure on infants.
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Rossetti E, Pro S, Picardo S, Longo D, and DI Capua M
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- Infant, Child, Humans, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain diagnostic imaging, Intensive Care Units, Pediatric, Brain Injuries, Respiratory Insufficiency diagnosis, Respiratory Insufficiency etiology
- Abstract
Background: Encephalopathy of different etiologies in infants is often the reason for central respiratory insufficiency which eventually leads patients to the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEPs) may be useful to identify brainstem alterations among patients with respiratory insufficiency of central origin. MRI is a compulsory technique to identify brain abnormalities, but may fail to detect brainstem lesions of small dimensions. BAEPs play a highly sensitive role on brainstem dysfunction identification because of the generators of different peaks which are related to specific brainstem structures., Methods: The study included ten infants affected by encephalopathy of different etiologies and early neurological respiratory failure. To evaluate BAEPs, the surface electrodes were placed at the vertex (Cz) and on each mastoid side., Results: All subjects presented alteration of BAEPs. The brain MRI revealed selective injury of the brainstem in four patients and supratentorial alterations in six patients., Conclusions: The early identification of brainstem lesions in mechanically ventilated infants with encephalopathy may reduce the weaning off mechanical ventilation's attempt numbers and provide early informative discussions with families and clinical caregivers about treatment options, such as tracheostomy, long term ventilation and the reduction of their length of PICU stay. Furthermore, this would support the evaluation process concerning the affected children, their families and the needs of other social groups, including health systems.
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- 2024
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35. Influence of Perceptual Load on Attentional Orienting in Post-Stroke Fatigue: A Study of Auditory Evoked Potentials.
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De Doncker W and Kuppuswamy A
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- Humans, Cross-Sectional Studies, Electroencephalography, Reaction Time physiology, Fatigue, Evoked Potentials physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Attention physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
- Abstract
Objective: Increasing perceptual load alters behavioral outcomes in post-stroke fatigue (PSF). While the effect of perceptual load on top-down attentional processing is known, here we investigate if increasing perceptual load modulates bottom-up attentional processing in a fatigue dependent manner., Methods: In this cross-sectional observational study, in 29 first-time stroke survivors with no clinical depression, an auditory oddball task consisting of target, standard, and novel tones was performed in conditions of low and high perceptual load. Electroencephalography was used to measure auditory evoked potentials. Perceived effort was rated using the visual analog scale at regular intervals during the experiment. Fatigue was measured using the fatigue severity scale. The effect of fatigue and perceptual load on behavior (response time, accuracy, and effort rating) and auditory evoked potentials (amplitude and latency) was examined using mixed model ananlysis of variances (ANOVA)., Results: Response time was prolonged with greater perceptual load and fatigue. There was no effect of load or fatigue on accuracy. Greater effort was reported with higher perceptual load both in high and low fatigue. p300a amplitude of auditory evoked potentials (AEP) for novel stimuli was attenuated in high fatigue with increasing load when compared to low fatigue. Latency of p300a was longer in low fatigue with increasing load when compared to high fatigue. There were no effects on p300b components, with smaller N100 in high load conditions., Interpretation: High fatigue specific modulation of p300a component of AEP with increasing load is indicative of distractor driven alteration in orienting response, suggestive of compromise in bottom-up selective attention in PSF., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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- 2024
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36. Evaluation of a headphones-fitted EEG system for the recording of auditory evoked potentials and mental workload assessment.
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Ladouce S, Pietzker M, Manzey D, and Dehais F
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- Humans, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Cognition physiology, Event-Related Potentials, P300 physiology, Electroencephalography methods, Evoked Potentials physiology
- Abstract
Advancements in portable neuroimaging technologies open up new opportunities to gain insight into the neural dynamics and cognitive processes underlying day-to-day behaviors. In this study, we evaluated the relevance of a headphone- mounted electroencephalogram (EEG) system for monitoring mental workload. The participants (N = 12) were instructed to pay attention to auditory alarms presented sporadically while performing the Multi-Attribute Task Battery (MATB) whose difficulty was staged across three conditions to manipulate mental workload. The P300 Event-Related Potentials (ERP) elicited by the presentation of auditory alarms were used as probes of attentional resources available. The amplitude and latency of P300 ERPs were compared across experimental conditions. Our findings indicate that the P300 ERP component can be captured using a headphone-mounted EEG system. Moreover, neural responses to alarm could be used to classify mental workload with high accuracy (over 80%) at a single-trial level. Our analyses indicated that the signal-to-noise ratio acquired by the sponge-based sensors remained stable throughout the recordings. These results highlight the potential of portable neuroimaging technology for the development of neuroassistive applications while underscoring the current limitations and challenges associated with the integration of EEG sensors in everyday-life wearable technologies. Overall, our study contributes to the growing body of research exploring the feasibility and validity of wearable neuroimaging technologies for the study of human cognition and behavior in real-world settings., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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37. Predicting early auditory evoked potentials using a computational model of auditory-nerve processing.
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Temboury-Gutierrez M, Encina-Llamas G, and Dau T
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- Animals, Humans, Auditory Perception, Cochlea, Computer Simulation, Cochlear Nerve, Evoked Potentials, Auditory
- Abstract
Non-invasive electrophysiological measures, such as auditory evoked potentials (AEPs), play a crucial role in diagnosing auditory pathology. However, the relationship between AEP morphology and cochlear degeneration remains complex and not well understood. Dau [J. Acoust. Soc. Am. 113, 936-950 (2003)] proposed a computational framework for modeling AEPs that utilized a nonlinear auditory-nerve (AN) model followed by a linear unitary response function. While the model captured some important features of the measured AEPs, it also exhibited several discrepancies in response patterns compared to the actual measurements. In this study, an enhanced AEP modeling framework is presented, incorporating an improved AN model, and the conclusions from the original study were reevaluated. Simulation results with transient and sustained stimuli demonstrated accurate auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) and frequency-following responses (FFRs) as a function of stimulation level, although wave-V latencies remained too short, similar to the original study. When compared to physiological responses in animals, the revised model framework showed a more accurate balance between the contributions of auditory-nerve fibers (ANFs) at on- and off-frequency regions to the predicted FFRs. These findings emphasize the importance of cochlear processing in brainstem potentials. This framework may provide a valuable tool for assessing human AN models and simulating AEPs for various subtypes of peripheral pathologies, offering opportunities for research and clinical applications., (© 2024 Author(s). All article content, except where otherwise noted, is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).)
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- 2024
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38. [Application of speech induced ABR in rehabilitation intervention for hearing impaired children].
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Gao M, Dou X, Su M, Fan Y, and Niu X
- Subjects
- Child, Humans, Child, Preschool, Hearing, Cognition, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Speech, Deafness
- Abstract
Objective: Exploring the electrophysiological changes of auditory rehabilitation in young children with hearing impairment, providing more methods for early assessment and intervention. Methods: Twenty children aged 2-4 were enrolled, with moderate hearing loss and no other abnormalities in the ears. Divide them into group 1 with normal hearing, group 2 with abnormal hearing, group 3 with abnormal hearing receiving hearing aid intervention for one year, and group 4 with abnormal hearing receiving hearing aid and language training rehabilitation for one year. The SmartEP auditory evoked potential instrument was used to detect speech induced ABR and conduct screening for 'Standards and Evaluating Hearing and Language Abilities of Children with Hearing Impairment in 80 enrolled children after rehabilitation training, and the latency、amplitude of speech induced ABR waveform and evaluation scale scores for each group after rehabilitation intervention were compared. Results: Compared with the normal group, the latency of each wave in the other three groups was prolonged. The differences in each wave between Group 2 and Group 3 were statistically significant, while the differences in D and F waves between Group 3 and Group 4 were statistically significant. Compared with the normal group, the maximum amplitude at F0 decreased in the other three groups, and the differences in maximum amplitude between Group 2 and Group 3, Group 2 and Group 4, and Group 3 and Group 4 were statistically significant. Compared with the normal group, the scores of the auditory language assessment scale in the hearing intervention group and the hearing aid plus language training group were significantly higher than those in the abnormal group in terms of recognition rate. The recognition rates of hearing impaired children with language training foundation are similar to those of the normal group of children. Conclusion: Auditory rehabilitation can alter the electrophysiological aspects of hearing and serve as a basis for early assessment and intervention in young children., Competing Interests: The authors of this article and the planning committee members and staff have no relevant financial relationships with commercial interests to disclose., (Copyright© by the Editorial Department of Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery.)
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- 2024
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39. Individuals With Autism Have No Detectable Deficit in Neural Markers of Prediction Error When Presented With Auditory Rhythms of Varied Temporal Complexity.
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Knight, Emily J., Oakes, Leona, Hyman, Susan L., Freedman, Edward G., and Foxe, John J.
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The brain's ability to encode temporal patterns and predict upcoming events is critical for speech perception and other aspects of social communication. Deficits in predictive coding may contribute to difficulties with social communication and overreliance on repetitive predictable environments in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). Using a mismatch negativity (MMN) task involving rhythmic tone sequences of varying complexity, we tested the hypotheses that (1) individuals with ASD have reduced MMN response to auditory stimuli that deviate in presentation timing from expected patterns, particularly as pattern complexity increases and (2) amplitude of MMN signal is inversely correlated with level of impairment in social communication and repetitive behaviors. Electroencephalography was acquired as individuals (age 6–21 years) listened to repeated five‐rhythm tones that varied in the Shannon entropy of the rhythm across three conditions (zero, medium‐1 bit, and high‐2 bit entropy). The majority of the tones conformed to the established rhythm (standard tones); occasionally the fourth tone was temporally shifted relative to its expected time of occurrence (deviant tones). Social communication and repetitive behaviors were measured using the Social Responsiveness Scale and Repetitive Behavior Scale‐Revised. Both neurotypical controls (n = 19) and individuals with ASD (n = 21) show stepwise decreases in MMN as a function of increasing entropy. Contrary to the result forecasted by a predictive coding hypothesis, individuals with ASD do not differ from controls in these neural mechanisms of prediction error to auditory rhythms of varied temporal complexity, and there is no relationship between these signals and social communication or repetitive behavior measures. Lay summary We tested the idea that the brain's ability to use previous experience to influence processing of sounds is weaker in individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) than in neurotypical individuals. We found no difference between individuals with ASD and neurotypical controls in brain wave responses to sounds that occurred earlier than expected in either simple or complex rhythms. There was also no relationship between these brain waves and social communication or repetitive behavior scores. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2020
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40. Nicotine reduces age-related changes in cortical neural oscillations without affecting auditory brainstem responses
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Jeffrey A. Rumschlag, Jonathan W. Lovelace, Jamiela Kokash, Anjum Hussain, and Khaleel A. Razak
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Auditory Cortex ,Mice ,Nicotine ,Aging ,Acoustic Stimulation ,General Neuroscience ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Animals ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Frontal Lobe ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
Neural oscillations at specific frequency bands are associated with cognitive functions and can identify abnormalities in cortical dynamics. In this study, we analyzed EEG signals recorded from auditory and frontal cortex of awake mice across young, middle and old ages, and found multiple robust and novel age-related changes in cortical oscillations. Notably, resting, evoked, and induced gamma power diminished with age, with some changes observed even in the middle age groups. Inter-trial phase coherence of responses to time-varying stimuli is reduced in old mice. Movement-related modulation of gamma power is reduced in old mice. An acute injection of nicotine (0.5 mg/kg), but not saline, in old mice partially or fully reversed the age-related changes in EEG responses. Nicotine had no effect on auditory brainstem responses , suggesting the effects occur more centrally. The age-related changes are consistent with reduced activation of specific inhibitory interneuron subtypes. Importantly, our data suggest that the auditory circuits that generate 'young' responses to sounds are present in old mice, and can be activated by nicotine.
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- 2022
41. Study of the neural plasticity in adults and older adults new hearing aid users
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Gabriela Valiengo de Souza, Carla Gentile Matas, Liliane Aparecida Fagundes Silva, Ivone Ferreira Neves Lobo, and Alessandra Giannella Samelli
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Hearing Aids ,Neuronal Plasticity ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Hearing Loss ,Sensorial Deprivation ,Philology. Linguistics ,P1-1091 ,Otorhinolaryngology ,RF1-547 - Abstract
ABSTRACT Purpose: to monitor, with long-latency auditory evoked potentials, the plasticity of the central auditory pathways in adults and older adults, new users of hearing aids. Methods: a total of 15 adults and older adults, aged 55 to 85 years, participated in the research. They had a symmetric bilateral mild to moderate sensorineural hearing loss, without previous experience with any type of hearing aid. The long-latency auditory evoked potentials were conducted with and without amplification, at 60 and 75 dBnHL, with speech stimulus in a sound field, in two assessment moments: up to one week after fitting the hearing aid and after six months of its use. The Student’s t-test was used for statistical analysis, considering significant the p-value < 0.05. Results: responses with lower latency values were observed for the right ear in the second assessment. Comparing the first with the second assessment, both with and without the hearing aid, an increase in the amplitude of P2-N2 was observed, as well as an increase in the latency of the P2 component at the intensity of 75 dBnHL. No statistically significant differences were observed at the intensity of 60 dBnHL. Conclusion:the use of the hearing aid promoted the plasticity of the central auditory pathways, increasing the number of neurons responsive to the sound stimuli.
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- 2020
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42. Frequency Characteristics of AEPs in Normal Young Adults and Comparison of Their Response Threshold and Pure Tone Audiometry Threshold
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CHENG Long-long*, LUO Fang-liang*, XIONG Yan-he, et al
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forensic medicine ,evoked potentials, auditory ,auditory threshold ,audiometry, pure-tone ,tone burst auditory brainstem response ,40 hz auditory event-related potential ,slow vertex response ,Medicine - Abstract
Objective The tests of three types of auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) were performed on normal young adults, to understand the frequency characteristics of different testing methods and the relationship between response threshold and pure tone audiometry threshold of different methods, and to discuss the forensic value of 3 types of AEPs to evaluate hearing function. Methods Twenty normal young adults were selected, their standard pure tone audiometry threshold, short-term pure tone audiometry threshold and the response threshold of 3 types of AEPs (tone burst-auditory brainstem response, 40 Hz auditory event-related potential and slow vertex response) at 0.5 kHz, 1.0 kHz, 2.0 kHz and 4.0 kHz were recorded. The relationship between the response threshold and standard pure tone audiometry threshold, short-term pure tone audiometry threshold of 3 types of AEPs at different frequencies as well as the differences between different types of AEPs were analyzed. Results The short-term pure tone audiometry threshold was higher than the standard pure tone audiometry threshold at each frequency. The response threshold and standard pure tone audiometry threshold of the 3 types of AEPs all had a certain correlation, and the response threshold of the 3 types of AEPs was higher than short-term pure tone audiometry threshold and standard pure tone audiometry threshold at each frequency. The differences in the differences between the response threshold and standard pure tone audiometry threshold of the 3 types of AEPs at different frequencies had statistical significance. Linear regression mathematical models were established to infer the standard pure tone audiometry threshold (hearing level) from response threshold (sound pressure level) of 3 types of AEPs of normal young adults. Conclusion When using response threshold of different types of AEPs to estimate pure tone audiometry threshold, conversion and correction are needed. Combined use of different types of AEPs could improve the accuracy of hearing function evaluation.
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- 2020
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43. Neurophysiological Correlates of Dynamic Beat Tracking in Individuals With Williams Syndrome
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Reyna L. Gordon, Miriam D. Lense, and Anna Kasdan
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Williams Syndrome ,Hypersociability ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,Population ,Neurophysiology ,Sensory system ,Cognitive neuroscience ,Audiology ,Electroencephalography ,Article ,050105 experimental psychology ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Rhythm ,Neurodevelopmental disorder ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,education ,Biological Psychiatry ,education.field_of_study ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,05 social sciences ,medicine.disease ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Auditory Perception ,Neurology (clinical) ,Williams syndrome ,Psychology ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Williams syndrome (WS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by hypersociability, heightened auditory sensitivities, attention deficits, and strong musical interests despite differences in musical skills. Behavioral studies report individuals with WS exhibit variable beat and rhythm perception skills. METHODS: We sought to investigate the neural basis of beat tracking in individuals with WS using electroencephalography (EEG). Twenty-seven adults with WS and sixteen age-matched typically developing control subjects passively listened to musical rhythms with accents on either the first or second tone of the repeating pattern, leading to distinct beat percepts. RESULTS: Consistent with the role of beta and gamma oscillations in rhythm processing, individuals with WS and typically developing control subjects showed strong evoked neural activity in both beta (13-30 Hz) and gamma (31-55 Hz) frequency bands in response to beat onsets. This neural response was somewhat more distributed across the scalp for individuals with WS. Compared with typically developing control subjects, individuals with WS exhibited significantly greater amplitude of auditory evoked potentials (P1-N1-P2 complex) and modulations in evoked alpha (8-12 Hz) activity, reflective of sensory and attentional processes, compared to typically developing control subjects. Individuals with WS also exhibited markedly stable neural responses over the course of the experiment, and these were significantly more stable than those of controls. CONCLUSIONS: These results provide neurophysiological evidence for dynamic beat tracking in WS and coincide with the atypical auditory phenotype and attentional difficulties seen in this population.
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- 2022
44. The effect of noise on the amplitude and morphology of cortical auditory evoked potentials
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Danielle Samara Bandeira Duarte, Silvana Maria Sobral Griz, Mônyka Ferreira Borges Rocha, Diana Babini Lapa de Albuquerque Britto, Denise Costa Menezes, and Karina Paes Advíncula
- Subjects
Adult ,Auditory Cortex ,Aging ,Adolescent ,Speech perception ,Middle Aged ,Electrophysiology ,Young Adult ,Hearing ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Speech Perception ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Humans ,Speech ,Noise ,Auditory evoked potentials ,Aged - Abstract
Objective: To analyze the effect of noise on electrophysiological measurements (P1-N1-P2 complex) of cortical auditory evoked potentials in normal hearing individuals of different ages. Methods: The inclusion criteria for the study were young individuals, adults and elderly, aged 18–75 years, with auditory thresholds up to 25 dB. Participants were separated according to their age group: G1 (18–25 years old), G2 (31–59 years old) and G3 (60–75 years old). Cortical auditory evoked potentials were elicited with synthetic speech stimulus /da/ presented in two conditions: without masking and with masking (Delta-t 64ms). The results were expressed and analyzed using statistical measures. Results: High latencies and reduced amplitudes were observed in the Delta-t 64 ms condition, in all age groups. There were significant differences between the groups, both in P1 latencies for the two conditions and in N1 latencies in the Delta-t 64 ms condition. P1 latencies in the condition without masking were lower in G1 and P1 and N1 latencies in the Delta-t 64 ms condition were higher in G3. The described results show the influence of noise on cortical responses in all age groups, with G3 being the most affected by the masking presentation. Conclusion: The latency and amplitude measurements vary according to the stimulus presentation condition and age group. The forward masking phenomenon occurred with greater precision in G3. Level of evidence: (2c).
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- 2022
45. The reliability of P300 and the influence of age, gender and education variables in a 50 years and older normative sample
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Deniz Yerlikaya, Duygu Hünerli-Gündüz, Ezgi Fide, Yağmur Özbek, İlayda Kıyı, İbrahim Öztura, and Görsev G. Yener
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology ,Physiology (medical) ,General Neuroscience ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Educational Status ,Humans ,Reproducibility of Results ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Event-Related Potentials, P300 ,Aged - Abstract
Objectives: The present study aims to investigate the effects of age, gender, and level of education on P300 in a healthy population, aged 50 years and over; and determine the reliability metrics for different conditions and measurement methods.Method: Auditory and visual oddball recordings of 171 healthy adults were investigated. A fully automated preprocessing was applied to elicit ERP P300. Maximum peak amplitude, latency and mean amplitudes were measured. Data were stratified by age, gender, and education to determine group-level differences by using repeat measures of ANOVA. The internal consistency of P300 was calculated by a split-half method using odd-even segments. Test-retest reliability was assessed by calculating the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC).Results: Maximum peak P300 amplitudes were higher in the 50-64 years age group compared to the >65 years age group; and females showed increased P300 amplitudes compared to males. P300 measures showed fair to good internal consistency and poor to good test-retest reliability.Conclusion: Age and gender should be taken into account when designing ERP studies with elderly individuals. P300 showed good internal consistency in general, between gender groups and age groups. Long-term test-retest reliability was lower but acceptable. These findings can be interpreted as the strength of P300 by being an objective and reliable method independent of cultural differences. Here we underline several factors that may affect P300 measures and discuss other possible factors that should be standardized for P300 to be used in clinical settings.
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- 2022
46. Reproductive state modulates utricular auditory sensitivity in a vocal fish
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Loranzie S. Rogers, Allison B. Coffin, and Joseph A. Sisneros
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Male ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Hearing ,Physiology ,General Neuroscience ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Animals ,Female ,Saccule and Utricle ,Vocalization, Animal ,Batrachoidiformes - Abstract
In many animals, vocal-acoustic communication is fundamental for facilitating social behaviors. For the vocal plainfin midshipman fish, the detection and localization of social acoustic signals are critical to the species’ reproductive success. Here, we show that the utricle, an inner ear end organ often thought to primarily serve a vestibular function, serves an auditory function that is seasonally plastic and modulated by the animal’s reproductive state effectively enhancing auditory sensitivity to courting male advertisement calls.
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- 2022
47. Is there a change in P300 evoked potential after 6 months in cochlear implant users?
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Miguel Angelo Hyppolito, Maria Stella Arantes do Amaral, Victor Goiris Calderaro, Ana Cláudia Mirândola Barbosa Reis, Eduardo Tanaka Massuda, and Henrique Furlan Pauna
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Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hearing loss ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Deafness ,Stimulus (physiology) ,Audiology ,Hearing ,Cochlear implant ,otorhinolaryngologic diseases ,medicine ,Humans ,Auditory system ,P300 ,Latency (engineering) ,Evoked potential ,business.industry ,Cochlear Implantation ,Cochlear implantation ,Electrophysiology ,Cochlear Implants ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Speech Perception ,Implant ,medicine.symptom ,business ,Event-related potentials - Abstract
Objective: There are few studies on long-latency auditory evoked potential (P300) in people with hearing loss who use a cochlear implant. Central auditory system evaluation with behavioral and electrophysiological tests is believed to help understand the neuroplasticity mechanisms involved in auditory functioning after cochlear implant surgery. This study investigated the electrophysiological processing of cortical level acoustic signals in a group of 21 adult individuals with postlingual bilateral severe-to-profound hearing loss who were submitted to cochlear implant surgery. Methods: Data were collected in three phases: pre-cochlear implant surgery, at cochlear implant activation, and 6 months after surgery. P300 measures were also registered during all phases. Tone-burst and speech stimuli were used to elicit P300 and were presented in free field. Results: Mean P3 component latency with tone-burst and speech stimuli were 352.9 and 321.9 ms in the pre-cochlear implant phase, 364.9 and 368.7 ms in the activation phase, 336.2 and 343.6 ms 6 months after the surgery. The P3 component mean latency values using tone-burst at activation were significantly different from those 6 months after cochlear implant. They were also significantly different using speech, between pre-cochlear implant and activation phases. Lower P3 component latency occurred 6 months after cochlear implant activation with tone-burst and pre-cochlear implant with speech stimulus. There was a weak correlation between mean P3 component latency with speech stimulus and time of hearing loss. There was no difference in amplitude between phases or in the comparison with the other variables. Conclusion: There were changes in P3 component latency during the period assessed, for both speech and pure-tone stimuli, with increased latency in the activation phase and similar lower results in the two other phases, Pre-CI and 6 months after CI use. Mean amplitude measures did not vary in the three phases.
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- 2022
48. Recurrent Neural Network Model of Human Event-related Potentials in Response to Intensity Oddball Stimulation
- Author
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Jamie O'Reilly
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Principal Component Analysis ,Acoustic Stimulation ,General Neuroscience ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Humans ,Electroencephalography ,Neural Networks, Computer ,Evoked Potentials - Abstract
The mismatch negativity (MMN) component of the human event-related potential (ERP) is frequently interpreted as a sensory prediction-error signal. However, there is ambiguity concerning the neurophysiology underlying hypothetical prediction and prediction-error signalling components, and whether these can be dissociated from overlapping obligatory components of the ERP that are sensitive to physical properties of sounds. In the present study, a hierarchical recurrent neural network (RNN) was fitted to ERP data from 38 subjects. After training the model to reproduce ERP waveforms evoked by 80 dB standard and 70 dB deviant stimuli, it was used to simulate a response to 90 dB deviant stimuli. Internal states of the RNN effectively combine to generate synthetic ERPs, where individual hidden units are loosely analogous to population-level sources. Model behaviour was characterised using principal component analysis of stimulus condition, layer, and individual unit responses. Hidden units were categorised according to their temporal response fields, and statistically significant differences among stimulus conditions were observed for amplitudes of units peaking in the 0 to 75 ms (P50), 75 to 125 ms (N1), and 250 to 400 ms (N3) latency ranges, surprisingly not including the measurement window of MMN. The model demonstrated opposite polarity changes in MMN amplitude produced by falling (70 dB) and rising (90 dB) intensity deviant stimuli, consistent with loudness dependence of sensory ERP components. Although perhaps less parsimoniously, these observations could be interpreted within the context of predictive coding theory, as examples of negative and positive prediction errors, respectively.
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- 2022
49. Neuronal imbalance of excitation and inhibition in schizophrenia: a scoping review of gamma‐band <scp>ASSR</scp> findings
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Toshiaki Onitsuka, Rikako Tsuchimoto, Naoya Oribe, Kevin M. Spencer, and Yoji Hirano
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Psychiatry and Mental health ,Acoustic Stimulation ,Neurology ,General Neuroscience ,Schizophrenia ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Humans ,Magnetoencephalography ,Electroencephalography ,Neurology (clinical) ,General Medicine - Abstract
Recent empirical findings suggest that altered neural synchronization, which is hypothesized to be associated with an imbalance of excitatory (E) and inhibitory (I) neuronal activities, may underlie a core pathophysiological mechanism in patients with schizophrenia. The auditory steady-state response (ASSR) examined by electroencephalography (EEG) and magnetoencephalography (MEG) has been proposed as a potential biomarker for evaluating altered neural synchronization in schizophrenia. For this review, we performed a comprehensive literature search for papers published between 1999 and 2021 examining ASSRs in patients with schizophrenia. Almost all EEG-ASSR studies reported gamma-band ASSR reductions, especially to 40-Hz stimuli both in power and/or phase synchronization in chronic and first-episode schizophrenia. In addition, similar to EEG-ASSR findings, MEG-ASSR deficits to 80-Hz stimuli (high gamma) have been reported in patients with schizophrenia. Moreover, the 40-Hz ASSR is likely to be a predictor of the onset of schizophrenia. Notably, increased spontaneous (or ongoing) broadband (30-100 Hz) gamma power has been reported during ASSR tasks, which resembles the increased spontaneous gamma activity reported in animal models of E/I imbalance. Further research on ASSRs and evoked and spontaneous gamma oscillations is expected to elucidate the pathophysiology of schizophrenia with translational implications.
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- 2022
50. Longitudinal Effects of Simultaneous and Sequential Bilateral Cochlear Implantation on Cortical Auditory-Evoked Potentials Recorded at Cz in a Large Cohort of Children
- Author
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Melissa J. Polonenko, Leticia C. Vicente, Blake C. Papsin, and Karen A. Gordon
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Speech and Hearing ,Cochlear Implants ,Otorhinolaryngology ,Child, Preschool ,Evoked Potentials, Auditory ,Speech Perception ,Humans ,Prospective Studies ,Child ,Cochlear Implantation - Abstract
Auditory development after bilateral cochlear implantation in children has been measured using source localization of multi-channel late latency responses. It is not clear, however, whether this development can be tracked using a more clinically feasible method of recording from one active recording electrode placed at mid-line center of the head (Cz).In this prospective cohort study, cortical auditory-evoked potential responses (CAEPs) were recorded from Cz referenced to each earlobe (Cz-CAEP) from 222 children with bilateral cochlear implant (CI); 128 (mean ± SD age: 2.78 ± 3.30 years) received both CIs in the same surgery (simultaneous group) and 94 (aged 7.72 ± 4.45 years) received a second CI after 4.21 ± 2.98 years of unilateral CI use. We sought to (1) identify cortical development over the first couple of years of bilateral CI use; (2) measure known asymmetries in auditory development between the CIs; and (3) detect the effects of bilateral rather than unilateral CI use. 4556 Cz-CAEPs were recorded across the cohort over 33.50 ± 7.67 months duration of bilateral CI use. Given concerns related to peak picking, amplitude areas were measured across two response time windows (50 to 199 ms and 200 to 400 ms).Results indicated that small response amplitudes occur at initial CI use and amplitudes increase in the negative or positive direction rapidly over the first months of CI use in both time windows. Asymmetries between Cz-CAEPs evoked by each CI were found in the sequential group and reduced with bilateral CI use, particularly in the first time window; these differences increased with longer inter-implant delay. Bilaterally evoked Cz-CAEPs were larger in amplitude than unilateral responses from either CI in the simultaneous group. In the sequential group, bilateral responses were similar to responses from the first implanted side but increased in relative amplitude with bilateral CI use. The Cz-CAEP measures were not able to predict asymmetries or bilateral benefits in speech perception measures.The Cz-CAEP was able to indicate cortical detection of CI input and showed gross morphological changes with bilateral CI use. Findings indicate Cz-CAEPs can be used to identify gross changes in auditory development in children with bilateral CIs, but they are less sensitive to tracking the remaining abnormalities that are measured by multi-channel CAEPs and speech perception testing.
- Published
- 2022
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