Saturday, 18 November 2017

Egocentric hearing: Study clarifies how we can tell where a sound is coming from


Egocentric hearing: Study clarifies how we can tell where a sound is coming from
A new UCL and University of Nottingham study has found that most neurons in the brain’s auditory cortex detect where a sound is coming from relative to the head, but some are tuned to a sound source’s actual position in the world.

The study, published in PLOS Biology, looked at whether head movements change the responses of neurons that track sound location.

“Our brains can represent sound location in either an egocentric manner – for example, when I can tell that a phone is ringing to my left – or in an allocentric manner – hearing that the phone is on the table. If I move my head, neurons with an egocentric focus will respond differently, as the phone’s position relative to my ears has changed, while the allocentric neurons will maintain their response,” said the study’s first author, Dr Stephen Town (UCL Ear Institute).

The researchers monitored ferrets while they moved around a small arena surrounded by speakers that emitted clicking sounds. Electrodes monitored the firing rates of neurons in the ferrets’ auditory cortex, while LEDs were used to track the animals’ movement.

Among the neurons under investigation that picked up sound location, the study showed that most displayed egocentric orientations by tracking where a sound source was relative to the animal’s head, but approximately 20% of the spatially tuned neurons instead tracked a sound source’s actual location in the world, independent of the ferret’s head movements.

The researchers also found that neurons were more sensitive to sound location when the ferret’s head was moving quickly.

“Most previous research into how we determine where a sound is coming from used participants with fixed head positions, which failed to differentiate between egocentric and allocentric tuning. Here we found that both types coexist in the auditory cortex,” said the study’s senior author, Dr Jennifer Bizley (UCL Ear Institute).

The researchers say their findings could be helpful in the design of technologies involving augmented or virtual reality.

“We often hear sounds presented though earphones as being inside our heads, but our findings suggest sound sources could be created to appear externally, in the world, if designers incorporate information about body and head movements,” Dr Town said.

Source & further reading:
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/news/news-articles/0617/150617-egocentric-hearing

Journal article:
http://journals.plos.org/plosbiology/article?id=10.1371/journal.pbio.2001878

#neuroscience #hearing #auditorycortex #animalbehavior #neurons #soundlocalization #research

3 comments:

  1. One of the things I found really cool about sound location was that we have a series of correlation nerves in our brains that only trigger when they get signals from both ears at the same time, and by distributing these nerve groups across the base of the brain from one side to the other, we can determine the different in time of receipt of sound, as a function of the speed of sound and the size of our heads, even though nerve propagation is slower than the speed of sound. I thought that was a really clever way for the brain to deal with processing signals far beyond its bandwidth.

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  2. Tell him to get a haircut. Sideburns went out in the 80s. ;-)

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  3. Interesting that there is a close up of someone's "lug'ole" as we used to call it but nobody is asking why our ear lobes are so oddly shaped.
    Well I worked out that some of the shape is for gaining maximum sensitivity from sound sources up ahead of us when we are walking with our heads tilted forwards - ie looking at the ground somewhere in front of us.
    The rest of the ear shape IMO is simply for changing the quality of sounds from different directions by reducing or enhancing different frequencies within the sounds according to which direction they come from.

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