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© Research
Publication : iScience

Predictable sequential structure augments auditory sensitivity at threshold

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in iScience - 21 Mar 2025

Nadège Marin, Grégory Gerenton, Hadrien Jean, Nihaad Paraouty, Nicolas Wallaert, Diane S. Lazard, Keith B Doelling, Luc H. Arnal

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 40124513

Link to HAL – hal-05000242

Link to DOI – 10.1016/j.isci.2025.112074

iScience, 2025, 28 (3), pp.112074. ⟨10.1016/j.isci.2025.112074⟩

Human hearing is highly sensitive and allows us to detect acoustic events at low levels. However, sensitivity is not only a function of the integrity of cochlear transduction mechanisms but is also constrained by central processes such as attention and expectation. While the effects of distraction and attentional orienting are generally acknowledged, the extent to which probabilistic expectations influence sensitivity at threshold is not clear. Classical audiometric tests, commonly used to assess hearing thresholds, do not distinguish between bottom-up sensitivity and top-down processes. In this study, we aim to decipher the influence of various types of expectations on hearing thresholds and how this information can be used to improve the assessment of hearing sensitivity. Our results raise important questions regarding the conventional assessment of hearing thresholds, both in fundamental research and in audiological clinical assessment.