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Not so primitive: context-sensitive meta-learning about unattended sound sequences

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posted on 2025-05-11, 09:44 authored by Juanita ToddJuanita Todd, Alexander Provost, Lisa R. Whitson, Gavin Cooper, Andrew HeathcoteAndrew Heathcote
Mismatch negativity (MMN), an evoked response potential elicited when a “deviant” sound violates a regularity in the auditory environment, is integral to auditory scene processing and has been used to demonstrate “primitive intelligence” in auditory short-term memory. Using a new multiple-context and -timescale protocol we show that MMN magnitude displays a context-sensitive modulation depending on changes in the probability of a deviant at multiple temporal scales. We demonstrate a primacy bias causing asymmetric evidence-based modulation of predictions about the environment, and we demonstrate that learning how to learn about deviant probability (meta-learning) induces context-sensitive variation in the accessibility of predictive long-term memory representations that underpin the MMN. The existence of the bias and meta-learning are consistent with automatic attributions of behavioral salience governing relevance-filtering processes operating outside of awareness.

Funding

NHMRC

1002995

History

Journal title

Journal of Neurophysiology

Volume

109

Issue

1

Pagination

99-105

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Science and Information Technology

School

School of Psychology

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