Brain mechanisms extracting invariant information from
varying auditory inputs were studied using the mismatch-negativity
(MMN) brain response. We wished to determine whether the
preattentive sound-analysis mechanisms, reflected by MMN,
are capable of extracting invariant relationships based
on abstract conjunctions between two sound features. The
standard stimuli varied over a large range in frequency
and intensity dimensions following the rule that the higher
the frequency, the louder the intensity. The occasional
deviant stimuli violated this frequency–intensity
relationship and elicited an MMN. The results demonstrate
that preattentive processing of auditory stimuli extends
to unexpectedly complex relationships between the stimulus
features.