Steady-state responses to concurrent melodies: source distribution, top-down, and bottom-up attention

Author:

Manting Cassia Low123ORCID,Gulyas Balazs123,Ullén Fredrik45,Lundqvist Daniel1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm 17177 , Sweden

2. Cognitive Neuroimaging Centre (CoNiC) , Lee Kong Chien School of Medicine, , Singapore 636921 , Singapore

3. Nanyang Technological University , Lee Kong Chien School of Medicine, , Singapore 636921 , Singapore

4. Department of Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet , Stockholm 17177 , Sweden

5. Department of Cognitive Neuropsychology, Max Planck Institute for Empirical Aesthetics , Frankfurt 60322 , Germany

Abstract

Abstract Humans can direct attentional resources to a single sound occurring simultaneously among others to extract the most behaviourally relevant information present. To investigate this cognitive phenomenon in a precise manner, we used frequency-tagging to separate neural auditory steady-state responses (ASSRs) that can be traced back to each auditory stimulus, from the neural mix elicited by multiple simultaneous sounds. Using a mixture of 2 frequency-tagged melody streams, we instructed participants to selectively attend to one stream or the other while following the development of the pitch contour. Bottom-up attention towards either stream was also manipulated with salient changes in pitch. Distributed source analyses of magnetoencephalography measurements showed that the effect of ASSR enhancement from top-down driven attention was strongest at the left frontal cortex, while that of bottom-up driven attention was dominant at the right temporal cortex. Furthermore, the degree of ASSR suppression from simultaneous stimuli varied across cortical lobes and hemisphere. The ASSR source distribution changes from temporal-dominance during single-stream perception, to proportionally more activity in the frontal and centro-parietal cortical regions when listening to simultaneous streams. These findings are a step forward to studying cognition in more complex and naturalistic soundscapes using frequency-tagging.

Funder

Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation

Swedish Foundation for Strategic Research

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

Reference55 articles.

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