AI Article Synopsis

  • The analysis of sound levels at both ears is crucial for localizing a sound source, with interaural level differences being represented by specific neuronal activity patterns.
  • Human auditory cortex exhibits two distinct components in response to sound—an initial transient response and a sustained signal—suggesting different underlying neural networks contribute to processing auditory information.
  • In a study with healthy subjects, the transient response was equally balanced across both ears, while the sustained response favored the ear opposite to the stimulus, indicating that these components have different roles: rapid sound detection for the transient response and detailed sound analysis for the sustained response.

Article Abstract

Among other auditory operations, the analysis of different sound levels received at both ears is fundamental for the localization of a sound source. These so-called interaural level differences, in animals, are coded by excitatory-inhibitory neurons yielding asymmetric hemispheric activity patterns with acoustic stimuli having maximal interaural level differences. In human auditory cortex, the temporal blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) response to auditory inputs, as measured by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), consists of at least two independent components: an initial transient and a subsequent sustained signal, which, on a different time scale, are consistent with electrophysiological human and animal response patterns. However, their specific functional role remains unclear. Animal studies suggest these temporal components being based on different neural networks and having specific roles in representing the external acoustic environment. Here we hypothesized that the transient and sustained response constituents are differentially involved in coding interaural level differences and therefore play different roles in spatial information processing. Healthy subjects underwent monaural and binaural acoustic stimulation and BOLD responses were measured using high signal-to-noise-ratio fMRI. In the anatomically segmented Heschl's gyrus the transient response was bilaterally balanced, independent of the side of stimulation, while in opposite the sustained response was contralateralized. This dissociation suggests a differential role at these two independent temporal response components, with an initial bilateral transient signal subserving rapid sound detection and a subsequent lateralized sustained signal subserving detailed sound characterization.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.neuroimage.2006.11.011DOI Listing

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