Literature DB >> 18455707

Auditory temporal edge detection in human auditory cortex.

Maria Chait1, David Poeppel, Jonathan Z Simon.   

Abstract

Auditory objects are detected if they differ acoustically from the ongoing background. In simple cases, the appearance or disappearance of an object involves a transition in power, or frequency content, of the ongoing sound. However, it is more realistic that the background and object possess substantial non-stationary statistics, and the task is then to detect a transition in the pattern of ongoing statistics. How does the system detect and process such transitions? We use magnetoencephalography (MEG) to measure early auditory cortical responses to transitions between constant tones, regularly alternating, and randomly alternating tone-pip sequences. Such transitions embody key characteristics of natural auditory temporal edges. Our data demonstrate that the temporal dynamics and response polarity of the neural temporal-edge-detection processes depend in specific ways on the generalized nature of the edge (the context preceding and following the transition) and suggest that distinct neural substrates in core and non-core auditory cortex are recruited depending on the kind of computation (discovery of a violation of regularity, vs. the detection of a new regularity) required to extract the edge from the ongoing fluctuating input entering a listener's ears.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18455707      PMCID: PMC2488380          DOI: 10.1016/j.brainres.2008.03.050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain Res        ISSN: 0006-8993            Impact factor:   3.252


  51 in total

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6.  BOLD correlates of edge detection in human auditory cortex.

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Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1983-09       Impact factor: 1.840

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Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1990-05       Impact factor: 1.840

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  20 in total

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Journal:  Eur J Neurosci       Date:  2020-03-09       Impact factor: 3.386

4.  Brain responses in humans reveal ideal observer-like sensitivity to complex acoustic patterns.

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6.  Frequency tagging to track the neural processing of contrast in fast, continuous sound sequences.

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7.  Hearing an illusory vowel in noise: suppression of auditory cortical activity.

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8.  "Change deafness" arising from inter-feature masking within a single auditory object.

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9.  Reduced auditory segmentation potentials in first-episode schizophrenia.

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10.  Cortical mechanisms for the segregation and representation of acoustic textures.

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Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2010-02-10       Impact factor: 6.167

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