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Hallucination Proneness Alters Sensory Feedback Processing in Self-voice Production.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Sensory suppression occurs when hearing one's self-generated voice, as opposed to passively listening to one's own voice. Quality changes in sensory feedback to the self-generated voice can increase attentional control. These changes affect the self-other voice distinction and might lead to hearing voices in the absence of an external source (ie, auditory verbal hallucinations). However, it is unclear how changes in sensory feedback processing and attention allocation interact and how this interaction might relate to hallucination proneness (HP).

Study design

Participants varying in HP self-generated (via a button-press) and passively listened to their voice that varied in emotional quality and certainty of recognition-100% neutral, 60%-40% neutral-angry, 50%-50% neutral-angry, 40%-60% neutral-angry, 100% angry, during electroencephalography (EEG) recordings.

Study results

The N1 auditory evoked potential was more suppressed for self-generated than externally generated voices. Increased HP was associated with (1) an increased N1 response to the self- compared with externally generated voices, (2) a reduced N1 response for angry compared with neutral voices, and (3) a reduced N2 response to unexpected voice quality in sensory feedback (60%-40% neutral-angry) compared with neutral voices.

Conclusions

The current study highlights an association between increased HP and systematic changes in the emotional quality and certainty in sensory feedback processing (N1) and attentional control (N2) in self-voice production in a nonclinical population. Considering that voice hearers also display these changes, these findings support the continuum hypothesis.

SUBMITTER: Duggirala SX 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC11349023 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Hallucination Proneness Alters Sensory Feedback Processing in Self-voice Production.

Duggirala Suvarnalata Xanthate SX   Schwartze Michael M   Goller Lisa K LK   Linden David E J DEJ   Pinheiro Ana P AP   Kotz Sonja A SA  

Schizophrenia bulletin 20240801 5


<h4>Background</h4>Sensory suppression occurs when hearing one's self-generated voice, as opposed to passively listening to one's own voice. Quality changes in sensory feedback to the self-generated voice can increase attentional control. These changes affect the self-other voice distinction and might lead to hearing voices in the absence of an external source (ie, auditory verbal hallucinations). However, it is unclear how changes in sensory feedback processing and attention allocation interact  ...[more]

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