J Audiol Otol.  2016 Apr;20(1):22-30. 10.7874/jao.2016.20.1.22.

Cortical Auditory Event Related Potentials (P300) for Frequency Changing Dynamic Tones

Affiliations
  • 1Department of Audiology and Speech Language Pathology, Kasturba Medical College (Manipal University), Mangalore, Karnataka, India.
  • 2NITTE Institute of Speech and Hearing, Mangalore, Karnataka, India. shastri.usha@gmail.com

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES
P300 has been studied with a variety of stimuli. However, the nature of P300 has not been investigated for deviant stimuli which change its characteristics from standard stimuli after a period of time from onset.
SUBJECTS AND METHODS
Nine young adults with normal hearing participated in the study. The P300 was elicited using an oddball paradigm, the probability of standard and deviant stimuli was 80% and 20% respectively. Six stimuli were used to elicit P300, it included two pure-tones (1,000 Hz and 2,000 Hz) and four tone-complexes (tones with frequency changes). Among these stimuli, 1,000 Hz tone served as standard while others served as deviant stimuli. The P300 was recorded in five separate blocks, with one of the deviant stimuli as target in each block. Electroencephalographic was recorded from electrode sites Fz, Cz, C3, C4, and Pz. Latency and amplitude of components of the cortical auditory evoked potentials were measured at Cz.
RESULTS
Waveforms obtained in the present study shows that, all the deviant stimuli elicited obligatory P1-N1-P2 for stimulus onset. 2,000 Hz deviant tone elicited P300 at a latency of 300 ms. While, tone-complexes elicited acoustic change complex (ACC) for frequency changes and finally elicited P300 at a latency of 600 ms. In addition, the results showed shorter latency and larger amplitude ACC and P300 for rising tone-complexes compared to falling tone-complexes.
CONCLUSIONS
Tone-complexes elicited distinct waveforms compared to 2,000 Hz deviant tone. Rising tone-complexes which had an increase in frequency elicited shorter latency and larger amplitude responses, which could be attributed to perceptual bias for frequency changes.

Keyword

P300; Frequency changing tones; Acoustic change complex; Cortical auditory evoked potentials; Doppler shift

MeSH Terms

Acoustics
Bias (Epidemiology)
Doppler Effect
Electrodes
Evoked Potentials*
Evoked Potentials, Auditory
Hearing
Humans
Young Adult
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