Probing a neural unreliability account of auditory sensory processing atypicalities in Rett Syndrome
Tufikameni Brima, Shlomit Beker, Kevin D. Prinsloo, John S. Butler, Aleksandra Djukic, Edward G. Freedman, Sophie Molholm, John J. Foxe

TL;DR
This study investigates abnormal auditory brain responses in Rett Syndrome by analyzing neural reliability and noise sources.
Contribution
The study introduces single-trial measures of neural reliability and denoising techniques to better understand auditory processing in Rett Syndrome.
Findings
RTT participants showed higher inter-trial variability and lower signal reliability in auditory responses.
Denoising source separation reduced noise overestimation of neural dysfunction in RTT.
Post-denoising, RTT still showed distinct differences in signal reliability compared to controls.
Abstract
Background In the search for objective tools to quantify neural function in Rett Syndrome (RTT), which are crucial in the evaluation of therapeutic efficacy in clinical trials, recordings of sensory-perceptual functioning using event-related potential (ERP) approaches have emerged as potentially powerful tools. Considerable work points to highly anomalous auditory evoked potentials (AEPs) in RTT. However, an assumption of the typical signal-averaging method used to derive these measures is “stationarity” of the underlying responses – i.e. neural responses to each input are highly stereotyped. An alternate possibility is that responses to repeated stimuli are highly variable in RTT. If so, this will significantly impact the validity of assumptions about underlying neural dysfunction, and likely lead to overestimation of underlying neuropathology. To assess this possibility, analyses at…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders · Autism Spectrum Disorder Research · RNA regulation and disease
