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Título
Hierarchical Temporal Processing in the Primate Thalamocortical System: Insights from Nonlinguistic Structured Stimuli
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Audio recordings
Brain
Electroencephalography
Mammals
Neurons
Synchronization
Clasificación UNESCO
2490 Neurociencias
Fecha de publicación
2025-11-06
Editor
American Association for the Advancement of Science
Citación
Ye H, Song P, Xu H, Li Q, Chen Y, Zhai Y, Chang C, Bao X, Tanigawa H, Tu Z, et al. Hierarchical Temporal Processing in the Primate Thalamocortical System: Insights from Nonlinguistic Structured Stimuli. Research 2025;8:Article 0960. https://doi.org/10.34133/ research.0960
Resumen
[EN]The ability of the brain to process auditory information across multiple temporal scales is crucial for perception. This study introduces an innovative experimental approach using nonlinguistic structured stimuli composed of click trains that alternate at different rates to investigate auditory processing across 3 distinct temporal scales: individual clicks (tens of milliseconds), click trains forming auditory objects (hundreds of milliseconds), and higher-order click trains in neuronal novelty detection (seconds) in both rhesus monkeys and humans. Electrocorticography recordings in the auditory cortex of rhesus monkeys unveil the primate brain’s remarkable ability to process intricate auditory temporal patterns at timescales of tens and hundreds of milliseconds. Furthermore, extracellular recordings in monkeys demonstrate pronounced responsiveness to deviant click trains at longer temporal scales in the primary auditory cortex (A1), accompanied by synchronization with both individual clicks and click trains. By contrast, neurons in the auditory thalamus prefer individual clicks only. Notably, neurons in A1 exhibit the ability to synchronize with individual clicks while simultaneously integrating these clicks into cohesive train objects, a phenomenon we term “temporal integration during synchronization”. Additional human electroencephalography recordings complement and support these findings, highlighting the paradigm’s potential for clinical applications. Our research offers novel insights into the neural mechanisms underpinning auditory information processing across various temporal scales at the neuronal level.
URI
DOI
10.34133/research.0960
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