Psychophysical studies show a slower response to changes in the specifically binaural input than to changes in the monaural input (binaural sluggishness). However, there is disagreement about the time course. Tracking changes in a target yields fast time constants, while detecting a constant target against a varying background yields the slowest. Changes in the binaural properties of a target are tracked up to high rates by cells in the midbrain. Indeed cells respond rapidly to a step change and then the firing rate slowly adapts. These experiments, though, are analogues of psychophysical experiments that give the faster time constants. Sluggishness should be more apparent physiologically in a binaural masking paradigm, detecting a short tone in a noise masker with a step change in masker correlation: the small change in firing rate due to the signal must be detected against the adapting firing rate change caused by the step change in the masker. However, in 40 inferior colliculus cells in the anesthetized guinea pig, in a direct analogue of the psychophysical masking paradigm, measuring thresholds for short tones across a transition in a binaural masker (e.g., from N0S0 to NpiS0) provided little evidence of sluggishness within individual cells despite masking level differences in these cells comparable with previous data. Previous studies of physiological correlates of binaural masking level difference suggested that different psychophysical thresholds arise from different populations of cells. This suggests the hypothesis that sluggishness may result from a change in focus between the different populations of cells signaling threshold in different binaural configurations rather than within the intrinsic properties of the cells themselves.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00267.2010 | DOI Listing |
Ear Hear
November 2024
Department of Speech Language Pathology & Audiology, Towson University, Towson, Maryland, USA.
Objectives: Musicians face an increased risk of hearing loss due to prolonged and repetitive exposure to high-noise levels. Detecting early signs of hearing loss, which are subtle and often elusive to traditional clinical tests like pure-tone audiometry, is essential. The objective of this study was to investigate the impact of noise exposure on the electrophysiological and perceptual aspects of subclinical hearing damage in young musicians with normal audiometric thresholds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTrends Hear
December 2024
Université de Lorraine, CNRS, Inria, Loria, Nancy, France.
In the intricate acoustic landscapes where speech intelligibility is challenged by noise and reverberation, multichannel speech enhancement emerges as a promising solution for individuals with hearing loss. Such algorithms are commonly evaluated at the utterance scale. However, this approach overlooks the granular acoustic nuances revealed by phoneme-specific analysis, potentially obscuring key insights into their performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Neurosci
January 2025
Experimental Otorhinolaryngology, Department of Neurosciences, KU Leuven - University of Leuven, Leuven, Belgium.
Binaural unmasking is a remarkable phenomenon that it is substantially easier to detect a signal in noise when the interaural parameters of the signal are different from those of the noise - a useful mechanism in so-called cocktail party scenarios. In this study, we investigated the effect of binaural unmasking on neural tracking of the speech envelope. We measured EEG in 8 participants who listened to speech in noise at a fixed signal-to-noise ratio, in two conditions: one where speech and noise had the same interaural phase difference (both speech and noise having an opposite waveform across ears, SπNπ), and one where the interaural phase difference of the speech was different from that of the noise (only the speech having an opposite waveform across ears, SπN).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
November 2024
Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences, Linköping University, Linköping, 58185, Sweden.
This study investigated the impact of bilateral bone conduction (BC) stimulation and sensorineural hearing loss on spatial release from masking, binaural intelligibility level difference, and lateralization. The study involved two groups of adults with mild to moderate sensorineural hearing loss: one group of 21 participants with symmetric hearing loss and another group of nine participants with asymmetric hearing loss. All tests were conducted through BC and air conduction (AC) headsets with non-individualized virtual positions of the sound sources and linear amplification based on individual hearing thresholds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEar Hear
October 2024
Deparment of Surgery, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland, USA.
Objectives: While single-sided deafness cochlear implants (SSD-CIs) have now received regulatory approval in the United States, candidate-ear candidacy criteria (no better than 5% word-recognition score) are stricter than for traditional CI candidates (50 to 60% speech recognition, best-aided condition). SSD implantation in our center began before regulatory approval, using a criterion derived from traditional candidacy: 50% consonant-nucleus-consonant (CNC) word-identification score in the candidate ear. A retrospective analysis investigated whether SSD patients exceeding the 5% CNC criterion nevertheless benefitted from a CI as assessed by spatial-hearing tests (speech understanding in noise [SIN] and localization) and by a patient-reported outcome measure quality-of-life instrument validated for patients with CIs.
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