Parallel EEG assessment of different sound predictability levels in tinnitus

Pia Brinkmann, Jana V. P. Devos, Jelle H. M. van der Eerden, Jasper Smit, Marcus L. F. Janssen, Sonja A. Kotz, Michael Schwartze*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Tinnitus denotes the perception of a non-environmental sound and might result from aberrant auditory prediction. Successful prediction of formal (e.g., type) and temporal sound characteristics facilitates the filtering of irrelevant information, also labelled as 'sensory gating' (SG). Here, we explored if and how parallel manipulations of formal prediction violations and temporal predictability affect SG in persons with and without tinnitus. Age-, education- and sex-matched persons with and without tinnitus (N = 52) participated and listened to pairedtone oddball sequences, varying in formal (standard vs. deviant pitch) and temporal predictability (isochronous vs. random timing). EEG was recorded from 128 channels and data were analyzed by means of temporal spatial principal component analysis (tsPCA). SG was assessed by amplitude suppression for the 2nd tone in a pair and was observed in P50-like activity in both timing conditions and groups. Correspondingly, deviants elicited overall larger amplitudes than standards. However, only persons without tinnitus displayed a larger N100-like deviance response in the isochronous compared to the random timing condition. This result might imply that persons with tinnitus do not benefit similarly as persons without tinnitus from temporal predictability in deviance processing. Thus, persons with tinnitus might display less temporal sensitivity in auditory processing than persons without tinnitus.
Original languageEnglish
Article number109073
Number of pages11
JournalHearing Research
Volume450
Early online date6 Jul 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2024

Keywords

  • Tinnitus
  • Auditory prediction
  • EEG
  • Sensory gating
  • Temporal predictability
  • Oddball
  • EVENT-RELATED POTENTIALS
  • TEMPORAL PREDICTABILITY
  • HEARING-LOSS
  • SELECTIVE ATTENTION
  • N1 WAVE
  • P50
  • NEUROSCIENCE
  • RELIABILITY
  • COMPONENTS
  • MODEL

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