Tracking the habituation of the event-related EEG potential in automatic change detection using an auditory two-tone oddball paradigm

Cereb Cortex. 2024 Apr 1;34(4):bhae157. doi: 10.1093/cercor/bhae157.

Abstract

The mismatch negativity and the P3a of the event-related EEG potential reflect the electrocortical response to a deviant stimulus in a series of stimuli. Although both components have been investigated in various paradigms, these paradigms usually incorporate many repetitions of the same deviant, thus leaving open whether both components vary as a function of the deviant's position in a series of deviant stimuli-i.e. whether they are subject to qualitative/quantitative habituation from one instantiation of a deviant to the next. This is so because the detection of mismatch negativity/P3a in the event-related EEG potential requires an averaging over dozens or hundreds of stimuli, i.e. over many instantiations of the deviant per participant. The present study addresses this research gap. We used a two-tone oddball paradigm implementing only a small number of (deviant) stimuli per participant, but applying it to a large number of participants (n > 230). Our data show that the mismatch negativity amplitude exhibits no decrease as a function of the deviant's position in a series of (standard and) deviant stimuli. Importantly, only after the very first deviant stimulus, a distinct P3a could be detected, indicative of an orienting reaction and an attention shift, and thus documenting a dissociation of mismatch negativity and P3a.

Keywords: EEG; ERP; P3a; adaptation; auditory; habituation; mismatch negativity (MMN); predictive coding.

MeSH terms

  • Caffeine*
  • Electroencephalography
  • Evoked Potentials
  • Habituation, Psychophysiologic*
  • Humans

Substances

  • Caffeine