Abstract

Auditory event-related potentials (ERPs) have been successfully used in adults as well as in newborns to discriminate recall of longer-term and shorter-term memories. Specifically the Mismatch Response (MMR) to deviant stimuli of an oddball paradigm is larger if the deviant stimuli are highly familiar (i.e., retrieved from long-term memory) than if they are unfamiliar, representing an immediate change to the standard stimuli kept in short-term memory. Here, we aimed to extend previous findings indicating a differential MMR to familiar and unfamiliar deviants in newborns (Beauchemin et al., 2011), to 3-month-old infants who are starting to interact more with their social surroundings supposedly based on forming more (social) long-term representations. Using a voice discrimination paradigm, each infant was repeatedly presented with the word “baby” (400 ms, interstimulus interval: 600 ms, 10 min overall duration) pronounced by three different female speakers. One voice that was unfamiliar to the infants served as the frequently presented “standard” stimulus, whereas another unfamiliar voice served as the “unfamiliar deviant” stimulus, and the voice of the infant’s mother served as the “familiar deviant.” Data collection was successful for 31 infants (mean age = 100 days). The MMR was determined by the difference between the ERP to standard stimuli and the ERP to the unfamiliar and familiar deviant, respectively. The MMR to the familiar deviant (mother’s voice) was larger, i.e., more positive, than that to the unfamiliar deviant between 100 and 400 ms post-stimulus over the frontal and central cortex. However, a genuine MMR differentiating, as a positive deflection, between ERPs to familiar deviants and standard stimuli was only found in the 300–400 ms interval. On the other hand, a genuine MMR differentiating, as a negative deflection, between ERPs to unfamiliar deviants from ERPs to standard stimuli was revealed for the 200–300 ms post-stimulus interval. Overall results confirm a differential MMR response to unfamiliar and familiar deviants in 3-month-olds, with the earlier negative MMR to unfamiliar deviants likely reflecting change detection based on comparison processes in short-term memory, and the later positive MMR to familiar deviants reflecting subsequent long-term memory-based processing of stimulus relevance.

Highlights

  • Our capacity to effectively interact with our environment relies on our ability to utilize both short-term and long-term memory (Atkinson and Shiffrin, 1968)

  • We aimed to extend the findings by Beauchemin et al (2011) of a modulation of the Mismatch Response (MMR) depending on the familiarity of the deviant to 3-month-old infants (10–18 weeks) who have gained a vast amount of experience with voices and are in a window of unique plasticity in the auditory cortex

  • The MMR was more positive for the familiar compared to the unfamiliar deviant across a large post-stimulus interval of 100–400 ms in frontal and central electrodes

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Summary

Introduction

Our capacity to effectively interact with our environment relies on our ability to utilize both short-term and long-term memory (Atkinson and Shiffrin, 1968). Long-term memory representations, on the other hand, are representations of events or information that we have encountered before and are stored for a longer time (hours to years), usually because of their relevance in guiding behavior (either due to emotional relevance or because they represent environmental regularities). Newborns and even fetuses show a preference for their own mother’s voice compared to the voice of a stranger (DeCasper and Fifer, 1980; Lee and Kisilevsky, 2014) This suggests that infants form long-term representations of familiar voices and use them to guide the short-term processing of incoming auditory information (like environmental sounds, voices, etc.) to identify their mother

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