Publications by authors named "Naoya Itatani"

Article Synopsis
  • The auditory system of European starlings is studied for its ability to distinguish sounds from the same source versus different sources, focusing on how spatial and frequency cues interact.
  • Neural and behavioral assessments reveal that as frequency differences or spatial separations increase, the birds' ability to detect sound shifts declines, with frequency differences impacting performance more than spatial factors.
  • Despite the observed effects on behavior due to different cues, the neural responses in the birds did not always correspond, suggesting that the processing of these cues occurs independently and influences perception in a layered manner.
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Animal models for auditory streaming.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

February 2017

Sounds in the natural environment need to be assigned to acoustic sources to evaluate complex auditory scenes. Separating sources will affect the analysis of auditory features of sounds. As the benefits of assigning sounds to specific sources accrue to all species communicating acoustically, the ability for auditory scene analysis is widespread among different animals.

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Article Synopsis
  • * It compares the neural responses from the VCN with those from the inferior colliculus (ICc) and finds that onset-type neurons demonstrate the most significant suppression, with faster recovery times, while those with sustained discharge show less suppression.
  • * The findings indicate that the suppression observed in the VCN and ICc does not fully match behavioral performance related to forward masking, although onset responders show a wide dynamic range of suppression similar to human psychophysical responses.
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Segregating streams of sounds from sources in complex acoustic scenes is crucial for perception in real world situations. We analyzed an objective psychophysical measure of stream segregation obtained while simultaneously recording forebrain neurons in the European starlings to investigate neural correlates of segregating a stream of A tones from a stream of B tones presented at one-half the rate. The objective measure, sensitivity for time shift detection of the B tone, was higher when the A and B tones were of the same frequency (one stream) compared with when there was a 6- or 12-semitone difference between them (two streams).

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Auditory streaming describes a percept in which a sequential series of sounds either is segregated into different streams or is integrated into one stream based on differences in their spectral or temporal characteristics. This phenomenon has been analyzed in human subjects (psychophysics) and European starlings (neurophysiology), presenting harmonic complex (HC) stimuli with different phase relations between their frequency components. Such stimuli allow evaluating streaming by temporal cues, as these stimuli only vary in the temporal waveform but have identical amplitude spectra.

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It has been suggested that successively presented sounds that are perceived as separate auditory streams are represented by separate populations of neurons. Mostly, spectral separation in different peripheral filters has been identified as the cue for segregation. However, stream segregation based on temporal cues is also possible without spectral separation.

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Streaming in auditory scene analysis refers to the perceptual grouping of multiple interleaved sounds having similar characteristics while sounds with different characteristics are segregated. In human perception, auditory streaming occurs on the basis of temporal features of sounds such as the rate of amplitude modulation. We present results from multiunit recordings in the auditory forebrain of awake European starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) on the representation of sinusoidally amplitude modulated (SAM) tones to investigate the effect of temporal envelope structure on neural stream segregation.

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