Abstract
Kaernbach, C., Schröger, E., & Gunter, T. C. (1998). Human event-related brain potentials to auditory periodic noise stimuli. Neuroscience Letters, 242(1), 17-20.
Human event-related brain potentials to auditory periodic noise stimuli
Periodic noise is perceived as different from ordinary non-repeating noise due to the involvement of echoic memory. Since this stimulus does not contain simple physical cues (such as onsets or spectral shape) that might obscure sensory memory interpretations, it is a valuable tool to study sensory memory functions. We demonstrated for the first time that the processing of periodic noise can be tapped by event-related brain potentials (ERPs). Human subjects received repeating segments of noise embedded in non-repeating noise. They were instructed to detect the periodicity inherent to the stimulation. We observed a central negativity time-locked on the periodic segment that correlated to the subjects behavioral performance in periodicity detection. It is argued that the ERP result indicates an enhancement of sensory-specific processing.
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Cognitive and Biological Psychology
University of Leipzig
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