Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Pred...

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences. / Milne, Alice E.; Zhao, Sijia; Tampakaki, Christina et al.
In: The Journal of Neuroscience, Vol. 41, No. 28, 14.07.2021, p. 6116-6127.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Milne, AE, Zhao, S, Tampakaki, C, Bury, G & Chait, M 2021, 'Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences', The Journal of Neuroscience, vol. 41, no. 28, pp. 6116-6127. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021

APA

Milne, A. E., Zhao, S., Tampakaki, C., Bury, G., & Chait, M. (2021). Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences. The Journal of Neuroscience, 41(28), 6116-6127. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021

Vancouver

Milne AE, Zhao S, Tampakaki C, Bury G, Chait M. Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences. The Journal of Neuroscience. 2021 Jul 14;41(28):6116-6127. Epub 2021 Jun 3. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021

Author

Milne, Alice E. ; Zhao, Sijia ; Tampakaki, Christina et al. / Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences. In: The Journal of Neuroscience. 2021 ; Vol. 41, No. 28. pp. 6116-6127.

Bibtex

@article{2830df77705148a0a4addefae33643e8,
title = "Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences",
abstract = "The brain is highly sensitive to auditory regularities and exploits the predictable order of sounds in many situations, from parsing complex auditory scenes, to the acquisition of language. To understand the impact of stimulus predictability on perception, it is important to determine how the detection of predictable structure influences processing and attention. Here, we use pupillometry to gain insight into the effect of sensory regularity on arousal. Pupillometry is a commonly used measure of salience and processing effort, with more perceptually salient or perceptually demanding stimuli consistently associated with larger pupil diameters. In two experiments we tracked human listeners' pupil dynamics while they listened to sequences of 50-ms tone pips of different frequencies. The order of the tone pips was either random, contained deterministic (fully predictable) regularities (experiment 1, n = 18, 11 female) or had a probabilistic regularity structure (experiment 2, n = 20, 17 female). The sequences were rapid, preventing conscious tracking of sequence structure thus allowing us to focus on the automatic extraction of different types of regularities. We hypothesized that if regularity facilitates processing by reducing processing demands, a smaller pupil diameter would be seen in response to regular relative to random patterns. Conversely, if regularity is associated with heightened arousal and attention (i.e., engages processing resources) the opposite pattern would be expected. In both experiments we observed a smaller sustained (tonic) pupil diameter for regular compared with random sequences, consistent with the former hypothesis and confirming that predictability facilitates sequence processing.",
author = "Milne, {Alice E.} and Sijia Zhao and Christina Tampakaki and Gabriela Bury and Maria Chait",
year = "2021",
month = jul,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021",
language = "Undefined/Unknown",
volume = "41",
pages = "6116--6127",
journal = "The Journal of Neuroscience",
number = "28",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sustained Pupil Responses Are Modulated by Predictability of Auditory Sequences

AU - Milne, Alice E.

AU - Zhao, Sijia

AU - Tampakaki, Christina

AU - Bury, Gabriela

AU - Chait, Maria

PY - 2021/7/14

Y1 - 2021/7/14

N2 - The brain is highly sensitive to auditory regularities and exploits the predictable order of sounds in many situations, from parsing complex auditory scenes, to the acquisition of language. To understand the impact of stimulus predictability on perception, it is important to determine how the detection of predictable structure influences processing and attention. Here, we use pupillometry to gain insight into the effect of sensory regularity on arousal. Pupillometry is a commonly used measure of salience and processing effort, with more perceptually salient or perceptually demanding stimuli consistently associated with larger pupil diameters. In two experiments we tracked human listeners' pupil dynamics while they listened to sequences of 50-ms tone pips of different frequencies. The order of the tone pips was either random, contained deterministic (fully predictable) regularities (experiment 1, n = 18, 11 female) or had a probabilistic regularity structure (experiment 2, n = 20, 17 female). The sequences were rapid, preventing conscious tracking of sequence structure thus allowing us to focus on the automatic extraction of different types of regularities. We hypothesized that if regularity facilitates processing by reducing processing demands, a smaller pupil diameter would be seen in response to regular relative to random patterns. Conversely, if regularity is associated with heightened arousal and attention (i.e., engages processing resources) the opposite pattern would be expected. In both experiments we observed a smaller sustained (tonic) pupil diameter for regular compared with random sequences, consistent with the former hypothesis and confirming that predictability facilitates sequence processing.

AB - The brain is highly sensitive to auditory regularities and exploits the predictable order of sounds in many situations, from parsing complex auditory scenes, to the acquisition of language. To understand the impact of stimulus predictability on perception, it is important to determine how the detection of predictable structure influences processing and attention. Here, we use pupillometry to gain insight into the effect of sensory regularity on arousal. Pupillometry is a commonly used measure of salience and processing effort, with more perceptually salient or perceptually demanding stimuli consistently associated with larger pupil diameters. In two experiments we tracked human listeners' pupil dynamics while they listened to sequences of 50-ms tone pips of different frequencies. The order of the tone pips was either random, contained deterministic (fully predictable) regularities (experiment 1, n = 18, 11 female) or had a probabilistic regularity structure (experiment 2, n = 20, 17 female). The sequences were rapid, preventing conscious tracking of sequence structure thus allowing us to focus on the automatic extraction of different types of regularities. We hypothesized that if regularity facilitates processing by reducing processing demands, a smaller pupil diameter would be seen in response to regular relative to random patterns. Conversely, if regularity is associated with heightened arousal and attention (i.e., engages processing resources) the opposite pattern would be expected. In both experiments we observed a smaller sustained (tonic) pupil diameter for regular compared with random sequences, consistent with the former hypothesis and confirming that predictability facilitates sequence processing.

U2 - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021

DO - 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2879-20.2021

M3 - Journal article

VL - 41

SP - 6116

EP - 6127

JO - The Journal of Neuroscience

JF - The Journal of Neuroscience

IS - 28

ER -