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Is my mobile ringing?

Evidence for rapid processing of a personally significant sound in humans
Publication date
2010
Document type
Forschungsartikel
Author
Roye, Anja
Schröger, Erich
Jacobsen, Thomas 
Gruber, Thomas
Organisational unit
Allgemeine und Biologische Psychologie 
DOI
10.1523/JNEUROSCI.1113-10.2010
URI
https://openhsu.ub.hsu-hh.de/handle/10.24405/16444
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Series or journal
The Journal of Neuroscience
ISSN
1529-2401
Periodical volume
30
Periodical issue
21
First page
7310
Last page
7313
Peer-reviewed
✅
Part of the university bibliography
✅
  • Additional Information
Language
English
Abstract
Anecdotal reports and also empirical observations suggest a preferential processing of personally significant sounds. The utterance of one's own name, the ringing of one's own telephone, or the like appear to be especially effective for capturing attention. However, there is a lack of knowledge about the time course and functional neuroanatomy of the voluntary and the involuntary detection of personally significant sounds. To address this issue, we applied an active and a passive listening paradigm, in which male and female human participants were presented with the SMS ringtone of their own mobile and other's ringtones, respectively. Enhanced evoked oscillatory activity in the 35–75 Hz band for one's own ringtone shows that the brain distinguishes complex personally significant and nonsignificant sounds, starting as early as 40 ms after sound onset. While in animals it has been reported that the primary auditory cortex accounts for acoustic experience-based memory matching processes, results from the present study suggest that in humans these processes are not confined to sensory processing areas. In particular, we found a coactivation of left auditory areas and left frontal gyri during passive listening. Active listening evoked additional involvement of sensory processing areas in the right hemisphere. This supports the idea that top-down mechanisms affect stimulus representations even at the level of sensory cortices. Furthermore, active detection of sounds additionally activated the superior parietal lobe supporting the existence of a frontoparietal network of selective attention.
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