Reduced P50 auditory sensory gating response in professional musicians

Brain and Cognition
Sibel KizkinHandan Isin Ozisik

Abstract

Evoked potential studies have demonstrated that musicians have the ability to distinguish musical sounds preattentively and automatically at the temporal, spectral, and spatial levels in more detail. It is however not known whether there is a difference in the early processes of auditory data processing of musicians. The most emphasized and studied early process, especially for neuropsychiatric purposes, is sensory gating. The suppression percentage of the midlatency auditory evoked potential P50, and rarely the N100, wave is used for sensory gating studies. Our aim in this study was to investigate whether there was a difference in the auditory P50 and N100 suppression of control subjects who were professional musicians with no psychiatric problems. 34 professional musicians and 19 non-musicians (the control group) were included in this study. P50 and N100 measurements were taken, the suppression percentage of P50 and N100 was calculated and the results compared. Musicians showed significantly less P50 suppression when compared to non-musicians. There was no significant difference for N100 suppression. What the decreased P50 suppression in musicians when compared to non-musician subjects means, when we also take into account th...Continue Reading

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Citations

Sep 26, 2007·Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience·Jeroen J Stekelenburg, Jean Vroomen
Sep 29, 2011·PloS One·Jaeho SeolChun Kee Chung
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May 7, 2019·Frontiers in Human Neuroscience·Tatsuya Daikoku, Masato Yumoto

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