“…Importantly, two spatiotemporal features could be appreciated when comparing the significant modulation of sMMN and nMMN (see Figures and , left panel, first two graphs from top): (1) The amplitude modulation of the sMMN had an earlier onset than the nMMN both at the contralateral temporal region (SEP‐M‐tROI a: 110 ms vs. NEP‐M‐tROI a: 182 ms) and ipsilateral temporal region (SEP‐M‐tROI d: 162 ms vs. NEP‐M‐tROI c: 186 ms)—a finding that is fully compatible with the conduction velocity of somatosensory Aβ and nociceptive Aδ fibers (Ploner, Schmitz, Freund, & Schnitzler, , ), respectively. (2) The difference of latency between the contralateral and the ipsilateral onset of activity was larger for the sMMN than for the nMMN (52 ms vs. 4 ms), thus supporting the notion that nociceptive processing is faster than tactile processing in the human brain; that is, somatosensory inputs are processed in a serial fashion (e.g., Hu, Zhang, & Hu, ) whereas the nociceptive inputs are processed in a parallel manner (Liang, Mouraux, & Iannetti, ; Ploner, Gross, Timmermann, & Schnitzler, ; Ploner, Schoffelen, Schnitzler, & Gross, ). Crucially, as the topographies of these responses largely overlapped, latency discrepancies are the main salient differences between sMMN and nMMN.…”