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Title: Differential cerebral reactivity to shortest and longer tones: neuromagnetic and behavioral evidence. Author: Cheng CH, Hsu WY, Shih YH, Lin HC, Liao KK, Wu ZA, Lin YY. Journal: Hear Res; 2010 Sep 01; 268(1-2):260-70. PubMed ID: 20600746. Abstract: Detecting a change in sound duration is important in language processing. The cerebral reactivity to a duration deviant in oddball paradigm has been reflected as a mismatch negativity (MMN). This study aimed to see cerebral responses to several duration-varying sounds presented with equal probability. Magnetoencephalographic (MEG) and behavior responses to equi-probable sounds (25-50-75-100-125 ms or 50-75-100-125-150 ms tones) were recorded in 10 healthy adult volunteers. By subtracting the average of the responses to 4 longer tones from the response to the shortest tone, a clear deflection peaking at 100-200 ms from stimulus onset was identified. This activity was called as sub-standard MMNm, and its amplitude tended to increase with the increment of duration deviance within a stimulation paradigm. The source of sub-standard MMNm was localized in superior temporal area, with 5-6 mm more anterior to the generator of N100m response. Behavioral tests also showed best performance in the recognition of the shortest tone than longer tones. In conclusion, the preferential response to the shortest tone in an equiprobable paradigm suggests an asymmetrical processing in the auditory cortex for duration-varying sounds.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]