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Interaction of Streaming and Attention in Human Auditory Cortex

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  • Alexander Gutschalk
  • André Rupp
  • Andrew R Dykstra

Abstract

Serially presented tones are sometimes segregated into two perceptually distinct streams. An ongoing debate is whether this basic streaming phenomenon reflects automatic processes or requires attention focused to the stimuli. Here, we examined the influence of focused attention on streaming-related activity in human auditory cortex using magnetoencephalography (MEG). Listeners were presented with a dichotic paradigm in which left-ear stimuli consisted of canonical streaming stimuli (ABA_ or ABAA) and right-ear stimuli consisted of a classical oddball paradigm. In phase one, listeners were instructed to attend the right-ear oddball sequence and detect rare deviants. In phase two, they were instructed to attend the left ear streaming stimulus and report whether they heard one or two streams. The frequency difference (ΔF) of the sequences was set such that the smallest and largest ΔF conditions generally induced one- and two-stream percepts, respectively. Two intermediate ΔF conditions were chosen to elicit bistable percepts (i.e., either one or two streams). Attention enhanced the peak-to-peak amplitude of the P1-N1 complex, but only for ambiguous ΔF conditions, consistent with the notion that automatic mechanisms for streaming tightly interact with attention and that the latter is of particular importance for ambiguous sound sequences.

Suggested Citation

  • Alexander Gutschalk & André Rupp & Andrew R Dykstra, 2015. "Interaction of Streaming and Attention in Human Auditory Cortex," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 10(3), pages 1-14, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0118962
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118962
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