Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Rule-based and stimulus-based cues bias auditory decisions via different computational and physiological mechanisms

View through CrossRef
Expectations, such as those arising from either learned rules or recent stimulus regularities, can bias subsequent auditory perception in diverse ways. However, it is not well understood if and how these diverse effects depend on the source of the expectations. Further, it is unknown whether different sources of bias use the same or different computational and physiological mechanisms. We examined how rule-based and stimulus-based expectations influenced behavior and pupil-linked arousal, a marker of certain forms of expectation-based processing, of human subjects performing an auditory frequency-discrimination task. Rule-based cues consistently biased choices and response times (RTs) toward the more-probable stimulus. In contrast, stimulus-based cues had a complex combination of effects, including choice and RT biases toward and away from the frequency of recently presented stimuli. These different behavioral patterns also had: 1) distinct computational signatures, including different modulations of key components of a novel form of a drift-diffusion decision model and 2) distinct physiological signatures, including substantial bias-dependent modulations of pupil size in response to rule-based but not stimulus-based cues. These results imply that different sources of expectations can modulate auditory processing via distinct mechanisms: one that uses arousal-linked, rule-based information and another that uses arousal-independent, stimulus-based information to bias the speed and accuracy of auditory perceptual decisions.
Title: Rule-based and stimulus-based cues bias auditory decisions via different computational and physiological mechanisms
Description:
Expectations, such as those arising from either learned rules or recent stimulus regularities, can bias subsequent auditory perception in diverse ways.
However, it is not well understood if and how these diverse effects depend on the source of the expectations.
Further, it is unknown whether different sources of bias use the same or different computational and physiological mechanisms.
We examined how rule-based and stimulus-based expectations influenced behavior and pupil-linked arousal, a marker of certain forms of expectation-based processing, of human subjects performing an auditory frequency-discrimination task.
Rule-based cues consistently biased choices and response times (RTs) toward the more-probable stimulus.
In contrast, stimulus-based cues had a complex combination of effects, including choice and RT biases toward and away from the frequency of recently presented stimuli.
These different behavioral patterns also had: 1) distinct computational signatures, including different modulations of key components of a novel form of a drift-diffusion decision model and 2) distinct physiological signatures, including substantial bias-dependent modulations of pupil size in response to rule-based but not stimulus-based cues.
These results imply that different sources of expectations can modulate auditory processing via distinct mechanisms: one that uses arousal-linked, rule-based information and another that uses arousal-independent, stimulus-based information to bias the speed and accuracy of auditory perceptual decisions.

Related Results

Rule-based and stimulus-based cues bias auditory decisions via different computational and physiological mechanisms
Rule-based and stimulus-based cues bias auditory decisions via different computational and physiological mechanisms
Abstract Expectations, such as those arising from either learned rules or recent stimulus regularities, can bias subsequent auditory perception in diverse ways. How...
Cortical Representations of Speech in a Multi-talker Auditory Scene
Cortical Representations of Speech in a Multi-talker Auditory Scene
Abstract The ability to parse a complex auditory scene into perceptual objects is facilitated by a hierarchical auditory system. Successive stages in the hierarchy ...
Augmentation of self-motion perception with synthetic auditory cues
Augmentation of self-motion perception with synthetic auditory cues
Abstract People who suffer from vestibular loss or damage have difficulty maintaining balance and perceiving their own motion in space (self-motion). Sensory augmen...
Subliminal emotional pictures are capable to modulate early cerebral responses to pain in fibromyalgia v1
Subliminal emotional pictures are capable to modulate early cerebral responses to pain in fibromyalgia v1
Participants A total of fifty-six right-handed women (29 healthy control (HC) subjects and 27 FM patients) took part in the experiment. All participants were aged between 33 and 63...
Habitat‐related differences in the frequency selectivity of auditory filters in songbirds
Habitat‐related differences in the frequency selectivity of auditory filters in songbirds
Summary 1. Environmental constraints in woodland habitats favour long‐range communication signals with slow modulations of frequency and amplitude, while constraints in open habita...
Auditory processing deficit in a patient with Ramsay Hunt syndrome
Auditory processing deficit in a patient with Ramsay Hunt syndrome
Objective: The present study was undertaken to investigate the auditory processing skills in an individual diagnosed as ‘herpes zoster oticus with polycranialis multipl...
Auditory-GAN: deep learning framework for improved auditory spatial attention detection
Auditory-GAN: deep learning framework for improved auditory spatial attention detection
Recent advances in auditory attention detection from multichannel electroencephalography (EEG) signals encounter the challenges of the scarcity of available online EEG data and the...
Multisensory-Mediated Auditory Localization
Multisensory-Mediated Auditory Localization
Multisensory integration is a powerful mechanism for maximizing sensitivity to sensory events. We examined its effects on auditory localization in healthy human subjects. The speci...

Back to Top