Abstract

When listening to music, pitch deviations are more salient and elicit stronger prediction error responses when the melodic context is predictable and when the listener is a musician. Yet, the neuronal dynamics and changes in connectivity underlying such effects remain unclear. Here, we employed dynamic causal modeling (DCM) to investigate whether the magnetic mismatch negativity response (MMNm)—and its modulation by context predictability and musical expertise—are associated with enhanced neural gain of auditory areas, as a plausible mechanism for encoding precision‐weighted prediction errors. Using Bayesian model comparison, we asked whether models with intrinsic connections within primary auditory cortex (A1) and superior temporal gyrus (STG)—typically related to gain control—or extrinsic connections between A1 and STG—typically related to propagation of prediction and error signals—better explained magnetoencephalography responses. We found that, compared to regular sounds, out‐of‐tune pitch deviations were associated with lower intrinsic (inhibitory) connectivity in A1 and STG, and lower backward (inhibitory) connectivity from STG to A1, consistent with disinhibition and enhanced neural gain in these auditory areas. More predictable melodies were associated with disinhibition in right A1, while musicianship was associated with disinhibition in left A1 and reduced connectivity from STG to left A1. These results indicate that musicianship and melodic predictability, as well as pitch deviations themselves, enhance neural gain in auditory cortex during deviance detection. Our findings are consistent with predictive processing theories suggesting that precise and informative error signals are selected by the brain for subsequent hierarchical processing.

Highlights

  • Surprising sounds in auditory sequences are perceived as more salient and generate stronger neural responses than expected sounds (Heilbron & Chait, 2018)

  • We found that pitch deviants were more detected and generated larger MMNm responses in highly predictable compared to less predictable melodies, and in musicians compared to nonmusicians

  • We found that the mismatch negativity (MMN) responses elicited by surprising sounds in music listening—and the effects of predictability and expertise on these responses—rest on disinhibition of auditory areas, as indicated by reduced intrinsic connectivity within A1 and superior temporal gyrus (STG) and backward connectivity from STG to A1

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Surprising sounds in auditory sequences are perceived as more salient and generate stronger neural responses than expected sounds (Heilbron & Chait, 2018). Research on attention has linked this selection to a modulation of postsynaptic gain in which the activity of neurons representing attended features and objects is enhanced (Garrido, Rowe, Halász, & Mattingley, 2018; Rabinowitz, Goris, Cohen, & Simoncelli, 2015; Reynolds & Desimone, 1999) Such gain modulation likely arises from a change in the strength of intrinsic (i.e., within-region) connections controlling the excitability of brain areas (Auksztulewicz et al, 2017, 2018; Auksztulewicz & Friston, 2015), usually ascribed to NMDA receptor function and synchronous interactions between fast-spiking inhibitory interneurons and pyramidal cells. We contrasted models in which intrinsic, forward, and/or backward connections were allowed to explain auditory evoked responses and their modulation as measured with MEG

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