Influence of envelope waveform on ITD sensitivity of neurons in the auditory midbrain

Interaural time differences (ITDs) conveyed by the modulated envelopes of high-frequency sounds can serve as a cue for localizing a sound source. Klein-Hennig et al. (J Acoust Soc Am 129: 3856, 2011) demonstrated the envelope attack (the rate at which stimulus energy in the envelope increases) and the duration of the pause (the interval between successive envelope pulses) as important factors affecting sensitivity to envelope ITDs in human listeners. Modulated sounds with rapid attacks and long pauses produce the lowest ITD discrimination thresholds. The duration of the envelope’s sustained component (sustain) and the rate at which stimulus energy falls at the offset of the envelope (decay) are only minor factors. We assessed the responses of 71 single neurons, recorded from the midbrains of 15 urethane-anesthetized tri-colored guinea pigs, to envelope shapes in which the four envelope components, i.e., attack, sustain, decay, and pause, were systematically varied. We confirmed the importance of the attack and pause components in generating ITD-sensitive responses. Analysis of neural firing rates demonstrated more neurons (49/71) show ITD sensitivity in response to "damped" stimuli (fast attack and slow decay) compared with "ramped" stimuli (slow attack and fast decay) (14/71). Furthermore, the lowest threshold for the damped stimulus (91 μs) was lower by a factor of 4 than that for the temporally reversed ramped envelope shape (407 μs). The data confirm the impor...
Source: Journal of Neurophysiology - Category: Neurology Authors: Tags: Research Articles Source Type: research