A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Auditory-evoked potentials to changes in sound duration in urethane-anaesthetized mice




AuthorsLipponen A., Kurkela J., Kyläheiko I., Hölttä S., Ruusuvirta T., Hämäläinen J., Astikainen P.

PublisherBlackwell Publishing Ltd

Publication year2019

JournalEuropean Journal of Neuroscience

Journal name in sourceEuropean Journal of Neuroscience

Volume50

Issue2

First page 1911

Last page1919

Number of pages9

ISSN0953-816X

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1111/ejn.14359(external)


Abstract

Spectrotemporally complex sounds carry important information for acoustic communication. Among the important features of these sounds is the temporal duration. An event‐related potential called mismatch negativity indexes auditory change detection in humans. An analogous response (mismatch response) has been found to duration changes in speech sounds in rats but not yet in mice. We addressed whether mice show this response, and, if elicited, whether this response is functionally analogous to mismatch negativity or whether adaptation‐based models suffice to explain them. Auditory‐evoked potentials were epidurally recorded above the mice auditory cortex. The differential response to the changes in a repeated human speech sound /a/ was elicited 53–259 ms post‐change (oddball condition). The differential response was observable to the largest duration change (from 200 to 110 ms). Any smaller (from 200 to 120–180 ms at 10 ms steps) duration changes did elicit an observable response. The response to the largest duration change did not robustly differ in amplitude from the response to the change‐inducing sound presented without its repetitive background (equiprobable condition). The findings suggest that adaptation may suffice to explain responses to duration changes in spectrotemporally complex sounds in anaesthetized mice. The results pave way for development of a variety of murine models of acoustic communication.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 21:47