Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10071/24715
Author(s): Alderson-Day, B.
Moffatt, J.
Lima, C. F.
Krishnan, S.
Fernyhough, C.
Scott, S. K.
Denton, S.
Leong, I. Y. T.
Oncel, A. D.
Wu, Y.-L.
Zehra Gurbuz
Samuel Evans
Date: 2022
Title: Susceptibility to auditory hallucinations is associated with spontaneous but not directed modulation of top-down expectations for speech
Volume: 22
Number: 1
ISSN: 2057-2107
DOI (Digital Object Identifier): 10.1093/nc/niac002
Keywords: Consciousness
Ketamine anesthesia
EEG markers of consciousness
Perturbational complexity index
Abstract: Auditory verbal hallucinations (AVHs)—or hearing voices—occur in clinical and non-clinical populations, but their mechanisms remain unclear. Predictive processing models of psychosis have proposed that hallucinations arise from an over-weighting of prior expectations in perception. It is unknown, however, whether this reflects (i) a sensitivity to explicit modulation of prior knowledge or (ii) a pre-existing tendency to spontaneously use such knowledge in ambiguous contexts. Four experiments were conducted to examine this question in healthy participants listening to ambiguous speech stimuli. In experiments 1a (n = 60) and 1b (n = 60), participants discriminated intelligible and unintelligible sine-wave speech before and after exposure to the original language templates (i.e. a modulation of expectation). No relationship was observed between top-down modulation and two common measures of hallucination-proneness.Experiment 2 (n = 99) confirmed this pattern with a different stimulus—sine-vocoded speech (SVS)—that was designed to minimize ceiling effects in discrimination and more closely model previous top-down effects reported in psychosis. In Experiment 3 (n = 134), participants were exposed to SVS without prior knowledge that it contained speech (i.e. naïve listening). AVH-proneness significantly predicted both pre-exposure identification of speech and successful recall for words hidden in SVS, indicating that participants could actually decode the hidden signal spontaneously. Altogether, these findings support a pre-existing tendency to pontaneously draw upon prior knowledge in healthy people prone to AVH, rather than a sensitivity to temporary modulations of expectation. We propose a model of clinical and non-clinical hallucinations, across auditory and visual modalities, with testable predictions for future research.
Peerreviewed: yes
Access type: Open Access
Appears in Collections:CIS-RI - Artigos em revistas científicas internacionais com arbitragem científica

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