There is uncertainty concerning the extent to which
the auditory streaming effect is a function of attentive
or preattentive mechanisms. The mismatch negativity (MMN),
which indexes preattentive acoustic processing, was used
to probe whether the segregation associated with the streaming
effect occurs preattentively. In Experiment 1, alternating
high and low tones were presented at fast and slow paces
while subjects ignored the stimuli. At the slow pace, tones
were heard as alternating high and low pitches, and no
MMN was elicited. At the fast pace a streaming effect was
induced and an MMN was observed for the low stream, indicating
a preattentive locus for the streaming effect. The high
deviant did not elicit an MMN. MMNs were obtained to both
the high and low deviants when the interval between the
across-stream deviance was lengthened to more than 250
ms in Experiment 2, indicating that the MMN system is susceptible
to processing constraints.