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Article Abstract

The need for attention to enable statistical learning is debated. Testing individuals with impaired consciousness offers valuable insight, but very few studies have been conducted due to the difficulties inherent in such studies. Here, we examined the ability of patients with varying levels of disorders of consciousness (DOC) to extract statistical regularities from an artificial language composed of randomly concatenated pseudowords by measuring frequency tagging in EEG. The objectives were firstly, to assess the automaticity of the segmentation process and the correlations between the level of covert consciousness and statistical learning capacities; secondly, to identify potential new diagnostic indicators. We observed that segmentation abilities were preserved in some minimally conscious patients, suggesting that auditory statistical learning is an inherently automatic low-level process. Due to significant inter-individual variability, word segmentation might not be robust enough for clinical use. In contrast, temporal accuracy of auditory syllable responses correlates strongly with coma severity.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11780136PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2024.111591DOI Listing

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