Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-14-8
Title: Brain activity underlying auditory perceptual learning during short period training: Simultaneous fMRI and EEG recording
Authors: De Souza, A.C.S
Yehia, H.C
Sato, M.-A 
Callan, D
Keywords: adult
article
attention
auditory discrimination
auditory frequency discrimination
Bayesian learning
controlled study
correlation analysis
directional hearing
electroencephalogram
electroencephalography
female
frontal gyrus
functional magnetic resonance imaging
gamma rhythm
human
learning
male
temporal gyrus
Acoustic Stimulation
Adult
Attention
Auditory Perception
Brain
Brain Mapping
Discrimination Learning
Electroencephalography
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Female
Humans
Image Processing, Computer-Assisted
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Oxygen
Photic Stimulation
Psychoacoustics
Reaction Time
Time Factors
Young Adult
Issue Date: 2013
Citation: De Souza, A.C.S, Yehia, H.C, Sato, M.-A, Callan, D (2013). Brain activity underlying auditory perceptual learning during short period training: Simultaneous fMRI and EEG recording. BMC Neuroscience 14 : 8. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2202-14-8
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
Abstract: Background: There is an accumulating body of evidence indicating that neuronal functional specificity to basic sensory stimulation is mutable and subject to experience. Although fMRI experiments have investigated changes in brain activity after relative to before perceptual learning, brain activity during perceptual learning has not been explored. This work investigated brain activity related to auditory frequency discrimination learning using a variational Bayesian approach for source localization, during simultaneous EEG and fMRI recording. We investigated whether the practice effects are determined solely by activity in stimulus-driven mechanisms or whether high-level attentional mechanisms, which are linked to the perceptual task, control the learning process.Results: The results of fMRI analyses revealed significant attention and learning related activity in left and right superior temporal gyrus STG as well as the left inferior frontal gyrus IFG. Current source localization of simultaneously recorded EEG data was estimated using a variational Bayesian method. Analysis of current localized to the left inferior frontal gyrus and the right superior temporal gyrus revealed gamma band activity correlated with behavioral performance.Conclusions: Rapid improvement in task performance is accompanied by plastic changes in the sensory cortex as well as superior areas gated by selective attention. Together the fMRI and EEG results suggest that gamma band activity in the right STG and left IFG plays an important role during perceptual learning. © 2013 Souza et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
Source Title: BMC Neuroscience
URI: https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/181580
ISSN: 14712202
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2202-14-8
Rights: Attribution 4.0 International
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