Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
926371 Cognition 2014 14 Pages PDF
Abstract

•3-month-old infants process novelty in temporal sequences at two distinct levels.•Violations of local expectancies elicited an early auditory mismatch response.•Violations of global expectancies led mainly to a late negative slow wave.•This suggests that hierarchical learning mechanisms are present in young infants.

The adult human brain quickly adapts to regular temporal sequences, and emits a sequence of novelty responses when these regularities are violated. These novelty responses have been interpreted as error signals that reflect the difference between the incoming signal and predictions generated at multiple cortical levels. Do infants already possess such a hierarchy of violation-detection mechanisms? Using high-density recordings of event-related potentials during an auditory local–global violation paradigm, we show that three-month-old infants process novelty in temporal sequences at two distinct levels. Violations of local expectancies, such as perceiving a deviant vowel “a” after repeated presentation of another vowel i-i-i, elicited an early auditory mismatch response. Conversely, violations of global expectancies, such as hearing the rare sequence a-a-a-a instead of the frequent sequence a-a-a-i, modulated this early mismatch response and led to a late frontal negative slow wave, whose cortical sources included the left inferior frontal region. These results suggest that the infant brain already possesses two dissociable systems for temporal sequence learning.

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Life Sciences Neuroscience Cognitive Neuroscience
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