Processing of self-initiated sound motion in the human brain
•Self-generated sounds result in attenuated brain responses measured with EEG.•We tested the motion-onset response for attenuation due to self-induction.•The motion-onset response was attenuated for self-induced sound changes.•However, this attenuation did not depend on action/sound motion congruenc...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Brain research 2021-07, Vol.1762, p.147433-147433, Article 147433 |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Self-generated sounds result in attenuated brain responses measured with EEG.•We tested the motion-onset response for attenuation due to self-induction.•The motion-onset response was attenuated for self-induced sound changes.•However, this attenuation did not depend on action/sound motion congruency.
Interacting with objects in our environment usually leads to audible noise. Brain responses to such self-initiated sounds have been shown to be attenuated, in particular the so-called N1 component measured with electroencephalography (EEG). This attenuation has been proposed to be the effect of an internal forward model that allows for cancellation of the sensory consequences of a motor command.
In the current study we asked whether the attenuation due to self-initiation of a sound also affects a later event-related potential – the so-called motion-onset response – that arises in response to moving sounds. To this end, volunteers were instructed to move their index fingers either left or rightward which resulted in virtual movement of a sound either to the left or to the right. In Experiment 1, sound motion was induced with in-ear head-phones by shifting interaural time and intensity differences and thus shifting the intracranial sound image. We compared the motion-onset responses under two conditions: a) congruent, and b) incongruent. In the congruent condition, the sound image moved in the direction of the finger movement, while in the incongruent condition sound motion was in the opposite direction of the finger movement. Clear motion-onset responses with a negative cN1 component peaking at about 160 ms and a positive cP2 component peaking at about 230 ms after motion-onset were obtained for both the congruent and incongruent conditions. However, the motion-onset responses did not significantly differ between congruent and incongruent conditions in amplitude or latency. In Experiment 2, in which sounds were presented with loudspeakers, we observed attenuation for self-induced versus externally triggered sound motion-onset, but again, there was no difference between congruent and incongruent conditions.
In sum, these two experiments suggest that the motion-onset response measured by EEG can be attenuated for self-generated sounds. However, our result did not indicate that this attenuation depended on congruency of action and sound motion direction. |
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ISSN: | 0006-8993 1872-6240 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.brainres.2021.147433 |