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Lasting first impressions: A conservative bias in automatic filters of the acoustic environment

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posted on 2025-11-09, 03:31 authored by Juanita ToddJuanita Todd, Alexander Lawson Provost, Gavin John Cooper
Even in the unattended auditory environment, what we learn first appears resistant to re-evaluation based on experience. Mismatch negativity (MMN) is an auditory event-related potential elicited to rare deviation from automatically generated predictions about the sound environment. MMN amplitude is thought to reflect the potential importance of a sound for further processing. This study was designed to explore the degree to which past experience with a sound can alter automatic attributions about that sound's importance. MMN was elicited to rare (p= .125) physical " deviants" amongst a sequence of highly probable (p= .875) " standard" sounds. Sound identity alternated across blocks within the sequence (i.e., the former deviant became the new standard and the former standard the new deviant). The time period over which a standard remained the more probable tone was varied over Fast (0.8. min), Medium (1.6. min) and Slow (2.4. min) change conditions. Given that local within-block probabilities remained constant across conditions, any change in MMN size was considered a reflection of more rostral brain regions enabling a longer time scale (across-block) representation of event-probability extraction. Larger MMNs were expected to deviations in blocks with longer standard-stability. Although a significant increase in MMN amplitude was observed with increased rule stability, MMN amplitude was heavily dependent on the initial sequence structure. A " primacy bias" was observed such that prolonged stability produced large increases in the MMN to deviations from the first established standard but substantially smaller MMN to this first standard as a later deviant. The primacy effect in these data implies that the automatic filtering of sound relevance is biased toward a confirmation of initial expectations. Initial experience therefore altered the perceived salience of subsequent events. © 2011.

Funding

This research was supported by a Project Enhancement Grant from the Faculty of Science and Information Technology and by the School of Psychology at the University of Newcastle. We gratefully acknowledge the assistance of Ms. Lisa Whitson and Dr. David McKenzie with recruitment and screening of participants. We thank the many participants for their time and co-operation.

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School of Psychology at the University of Newcastle

History

Journal title

Neuropsychologia

Location

Amsterdam

Volume

49

Issue

12

Pagination

3399-3405

Publisher

Elsevier

Language

  • en, English

Translated

  • No

College/Research Centre

College of Engineering, Science and Environment

School

School of Psychological Sciences