Presentation 2006/4/14
Attentive auditory perception is preceded by prediction in a multimodal context
Masato YUMOTO,
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Abstract(in English) In our daily life, sounds are perceived in various multimodal contexts. When you hear speech or music on the phone, sensory information correlated with sounds is dominantly in the auditory domain. On the other hand, if you are one of the audience in a musical concert or symposium, not only auditory but also visual information may correlate with sounds. Furthermore, if you yourself talk or play music, kinesthetic feedback information as a result of your own action also correlates with hearing sounds. It is well known that the mismatch negativity (MMN), which reflects preattentive deviance detection process, is elicited by the infrequent occurrences in a unimodal auditory context. Recently, a cross-modal oddball paradigm revealed that deviant sounds in a multimodal context may also elicit MMN-like activities. The brain function of sound prediction derived from multimodal contexts is always alert in attentional condition. This function may save neural substrates for other simultaneously executed information processing and is relevant to various higher-order brain functions.
Keyword(in Japanese) (See Japanese page)
Keyword(in English) Context / Prediction / Multimodal / Mismatch negativity / Attention / Auditory imagery / Language / Music
Paper # TL2006-4
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Committee TL
Conference Date 2006/4/14(1days)
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Registration To Thought and Language (TL)
Language JPN
Title (in Japanese) (See Japanese page)
Sub Title (in Japanese) (See Japanese page)
Title (in English) Attentive auditory perception is preceded by prediction in a multimodal context
Sub Title (in English)
Keyword(1) Context
Keyword(2) Prediction
Keyword(3) Multimodal
Keyword(4) Mismatch negativity
Keyword(5) Attention
Keyword(6) Auditory imagery
Keyword(7) Language
Keyword(8) Music
1st Author's Name Masato YUMOTO
1st Author's Affiliation Clinical Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tokyo()
Date 2006/4/14
Paper # TL2006-4
Volume (vol) vol.106
Number (no) 23
Page pp.pp.-
#Pages 4
Date of Issue