Учебники / Hearing - From Sensory Processing to Perception Kollmeier 2007
.pdfHearing – From Sensory Processing to Perception
B. Kollmeier |
G. Klump |
V. Hohmann |
U. Langemann |
M. Mauermann |
S. Uppenkamp |
J. Verhey (Eds.) |
|
Hearing – From Sensory
Processing to Perception
With 224 Figures
Prof. Dr. Birger Kollmeier
Prof. Dr. Georg Klump
Dr. Volker Hohmann
Dr. Ulrike Langemann
Dr. Manfred Mauermann
Dr. Stefan Uppenkamp
Dr. Jesko Verhey
Fakult¨at V Institut f¨ur Physik
Carl-von-Ossietzky Universit¨at 26111 Oldenburg
Germany
Library of Congress Control Number: 2007928331
ISBN: 978-3-540-73008-8 Springer Berlin Heidelberg New York
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Editor: Dr. Dieter Czeschlik, Heidelberg, Germany
Desk editor: Dr. Jutta Lindenborn, Heidelberg, Germany
Cover design: WMXDesign GmbH, Heidelberg, Germany
Production and typesetting: SPi
Printed on acid-free paper SPIN 11915300 |
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Preface
The current book presents the written contributions to a kind of “World summit on hearing research”, i.e., the “International Symposium on Hearing” (ISH 2006) which was held in Cloppenburg, a small northern German town close to Oldenburg and Bremen in August 2006.
The International Symposium on Hearing has been held approximately every three years in Europe since 1969. The participants come from groups mostly in Europe and in the USA that focus on a wide range of topics in research on auditory system function. It is a hallmark of this truly interdisciplinary meeting to bring together well known researchers specializing on psychophysics, physiology and models of hearing. This connection stimulates the discussion on the physiological mechanisms underlying perception and provides the basis for a better understanding of auditory function. Modelling approaches complement the experimental studies and serve as a framework for interpreting the results and developing new experimental paradigms.
The main themes of the current meeting are at the focus of interest in hearing research. The physiological representation of the temporal and the spectral structure of stimuli on different levels of the auditory system is a pervasive topic of the studies presented at the meeting, helping us to understand the perception of modulation patterns, pitch and signal intensity. Our knowledge of the physiological mechanisms of binaural processing in mammals is developing further, providing an improved basis for understanding spatial hearing. How the different stimulus features are integrated into auditory scene analysis and which physiological mechanisms allow the formation of auditory objects is another unifying theme linking researchers focussing on modeling, physiology and psychophysics. Finally, the topics of speech perception and the limitations of auditory perception resulting from hearing disorders were discussed on the basis of our understanding of the physiology of the auditory system.
The chapters of this volume with the proceedings of the “14th International Symposium on Hearing” provide an up-to-date status of the field of hearing research. We hope that it will stimulate further discussion and will also enable newcomers to the field to access the newest developments in our understanding of auditory system function and auditory perception.
The organizers of the ISH 2006 and editors of this book are affiliated with the Universität Oldenburg where one of the largest European centres for
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Preface |
hearing research is located. Institutional support for the ISH 2006 was therefore provided by:
●Kompetenzzentrum HörTech (i.e., national centre of competence for hearing aid system technology, located in the “house of hearing” in Oldenburg)
●Sonderforschungsbereich/Transregio “Das aktive Gehör” (Oldenburg/ Magdeburg, i.e., collaborative research center “the active auditory system” supported by DFG)
●Internationales Graduiertenkolleg (international research training site) “neurosensory science, systems, and applications” (Oldenburg/Groningen, supported by DFG and NWO)
Further financial support was kindly provided by Widex A/S and Siemens Audiologische Technik (SAT). The organizers wish to thank these institutions and all individuals that made the ISH 2006 an unforgettable event.
Oldenburg, December 2006 |
Birger Kollmeier, |
|
Georg Klump, |
|
Volker Hohmann, |
|
Ulrike Langemann, |
|
Manfred Mauermann, |
|
Stefan Uppenkamp, and |
|
Jesko Verhey |
List of participants (and key to photograph)
Bahmer, Andreas |
49 |
Beutelmann, Rainer |
89 |
Bleeck, Stefan |
13 |
Carlyon, Bob |
80 |
Carney, Laurel L. |
91 |
Carr, Catherine E. |
16 |
Chait, Maria |
17 |
Chen, Hsi-Pin |
73 |
Christiansen, Thomas Ulrich |
45 |
Colburn, Steve |
1 |
de Cheveigné, Alan |
28 |
Demany, Laurent |
82 |
Dietz, Matthias |
26 |
Divenyi, Pierre |
36 |
Dooling, Robert J. |
43 |
Duifhuis, Hendrikus |
88 |
Egorova, Marina |
77 |
El Hilali, Mounya |
81 |
Emiroglu, Suzan |
4 |
Englitz, Bernhard |
22 |
Ernst, Stephan |
25 |
Ewert, Stephan D. |
19 |
Festen, Joost M. |
59 |
Garre, Susanne |
71 |
Ghitza, Oded |
46 |
Gleich, Otto |
34 |
Goossens, Tom |
87 |
Goupell, Matthew Joseph |
66 |
viii |
|
Goverts, Theo |
11 |
Greenberg, Steven |
75 |
Grimault, Nicolas |
2 |
Hage, Steffen R. |
63 |
Hall, Deborah A. |
67 |
Hancock, Kenneth E. |
31 |
Hansen, Hans |
50 |
Hartmann, William M. |
74 |
Heinz, Michael G. |
32 |
Heise, Stephan |
93 |
Henning, G. Bruce |
53 |
Hohmann, Volker |
10 |
Junius, Dirk |
24 |
Kashino, Makio |
39 |
Klinge, Astrid |
72 |
Klump, Georg |
21 |
Kohlrausch, Armin |
35 |
Kollmeier, Birger |
9 |
Langemann, Ulrike |
7 |
Langers, Dave R.M. |
83 |
Langner, Gerald |
15 |
Leek, Marjorie R. |
33 |
Leijon, Arne |
62 |
Long, Glenis |
23 |
Lopez-Poveda, Enrique A. |
30 |
Lüddemann, Helge |
37 |
Lütkenhöner, Bernd |
68 |
Marquardt, Torsten |
90 |
Mauermann, Manfred |
6 |
McAlpine, David |
27 |
Meddis, Raymond |
40 |
Meyer, Julia |
55 |
Micheyl, Christophe |
94 |
Narins, Peter M. |
84 |
Neher, Tobias |
54 |
Nelson, Paul |
61 |
Palmer, Alan R. |
78 |
Patterson, Roy D. |
14 |
Plack, Christopher J. |
42 |
List of Participants |
|
Pressnitzer, Daniel |
69 |
Riedel, Helmut |
60 |
Roberts, Brian |
47 |
Rupp, Andre |
48 |
Schimmel, Othmar |
86 |
Schmidt, Erik |
12 |
Schoffelen, Rick |
92 |
Shackleton, Trevor M. |
64 |
Shamma, Shihab A. |
79 |
Shinn-Cunningham, Barbara |
3 |
Simon, Jonathan Z. |
18 |
Siveke, Ida |
52 |
Strahl, Stefan |
76 |
Trahiotis, Constantine |
65 |
Tsuzaki, Minoru |
20 |
Unoki, Masashi |
38 |
Uppenkamp, Stefan |
5 |
van Beurden, Maarten F. B. |
44 |
van de Par, Steven |
57 |
Verhey, Jesko Lars |
8 |
Watkins, Anthony |
56 |
Weber, Reinhard |
51 |
Wiegrebe, Lutz |
70 |
Winter, Ian Michael |
29 |
Yasin, Ifat |
41 |
Yost, William A. |
85 |
Young, Eric D. |
58 |
Not in photograph:
Bilsen, Frans A.
Culling, John F. Delgutte, Bertrand Devore, Sasha Ihlefeld, Antje Kaernbach, Christian Seeber, Bernhard U. van Dijk, Pim
Tollin, Daniel J.
Contents
Part I Cochlea/Peripheral Processing
1Influence of Neural Synchrony on the Compound Action Potential,
Masking, and the Discrimination of Harmonic Complexes
in Several Avian and Mammalian Species . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1
OTTO GLEICH, MARJORIE LEEK, AND ROBERT DOOLING
2A Nonlinear Auditory Filterbank Controlled by Sub-band Instantaneous
Frequency Estimates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
VOLKER HOHMANN AND BIRGER KOLLMEIER
3Estimates of Tuning of Auditory Filter Using Simultaneous
and Forward Notched-noise Masking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
MASASHI UNOKI, RYOTA MIYAUCHI, AND CHIN-TUAN TAN
4 A Model of Ventral Cochlear Nucleus Units Based on First Order Intervals . . .27
STEFAN BLEECK AND IAN WINTER
5The Effect of Reverberation on the Temporal Representation of the F0 of Frequency Swept Harmonic Complexes
in the Ventral Cochlear Nucleus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35
MARK SAYLES, BERT SCHOUTEN, NEIL J. INGHAM, AND IAN M. WINTER
6 Spectral Edges as Optimal Stimuli for the Dorsal Cochlear Nucleus . . . . . . . . . .43
SHARBA BANDYOPADHYAY, ERIC D. YOUNG, AND LINA A. J. REISS
7Psychophysical and Physiological Assessment of the Representation
of High-frequency Spectral Notches in the Auditory Nerve . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51
ENRIQUE A. LOPEZ-POVEDA, ANA ALVES-PINTO, AND ALAN R. PALMER
Part II Pitch
8Spatio-Temporal Representation of the Pitch of Complex Tones
in the Auditory Nerve . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61
LEONARDO CEDOLIN AND BERTRAND DELGUTTE
9 Virtual Pitch in a Computational Physiological Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .71
RAY MEDDIS AND LOWEL O’MARD
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Contents |
10 Searching for a Pitch Centre in Human Auditory Cortex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83
DEB HALL AND CHRISTOPHER PLACK
11 Imaging Temporal Pitch Processing in the Auditory Pathway . . . . . . . . . . . . . .95
ROY D. PATTERSON, ALEXANDER GUTSCHALK, ANNEMARIE SEITHER-PREISLER,
AND KATRIN KRUMBHOLZ
Part III Modulation
12 Spatiotemporal Encoding of Vowels in Noise Studied with
the Responses of Individual Auditory-Nerve Fibers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .107
MICHAEL G. HEINZ
13 Role of Peripheral Nonlinearities in Comodulation Masking Release . . . . . .117
JESKO L. VERHEY AND STEPHAN M.A. ERNST
14 Neuromagnetic Representation of Comodulation Masking Release
in the Human Auditory Cortex . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .125
ANDRÉ RUPP, LIORA LAS, AND ISRAEL NELKEN
15Psychophysically Driven Studies of Responses to Amplitude Modulation in the Inferior Colliculus: Comparing Single-Unit
Physiology to Behavioral Performance . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .133
PAUL C. NELSON AND LAUREL H. CARNEY
16 Source Segregation Based on Temporal Envelope Structure
and Binaural Cues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143
STEVEN VAN DE PAR, OTHMAR SCHIMMEL, ARMIN KOHLRAUSCH,
AND JEROEN BREEBAART
17 Simulation of Oscillating Neurons in the Cochlear Nucleus:
A Possible Role for Neural Nets, Onset Cells, and Synaptic Delays . . . . . . . . .155
ANDREAS BAHMER AND GERALD LANGNER
18 Forward Masking: Temporal Integration or Adaptation? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .165
STEPHAN D. EWERT, OLE HAU, AND TORSTEN DAU
19 The Time Course of Listening Bands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .175
PIERRE DIVENYI AND ADAM LAMMERT
Part IV Animal Communication
20 Frogs Communicate with Ultrasound in Noisy Environments . . . . . . . . . . . . .185
PETER M. NARINS, ALBERT S. FENG, AND JUN-XIAN SHEN
21 The Olivocochlear System Takes Part in Audio-Vocal Interaction . . . . . . . . .191
STEFFEN R. HAGE, UWE JÜRGENS, AND GÜNTER EHRET