Brain Activation in Relation to Sound Intensity and Loudness

  • Langers D
  • Backes W
  • Van Dijk P
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Abstract

The aim of this fMRI study was to relate cortical fMRI responses to both physical and perceptual sound level characteristics. Besides subjects with normal hearing, subjects with high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss were included, as distortion of loudness perception is a characteristic of such impairment. Cortical responses in both subject groups were analyzed as a function of the physical intensity and the perceived loudness of low and high-frequency stimuli. For the low-frequency stimuli, intensity levels ranged from 0 to 70 dB SL; for the high-frequency stimuli, intensity levels were set such that the corresponding loudness levels matched those of the low-frequency stimuli. Responses were found to increase significantly and predominantly linearly with intensity level and with loudness level. Response saturation at the highest levels was not apparent, but activation exhibited a steep rise between 0 and 10 dB for the low-frequency stimuli. The activation in the subjects with hearing loss increased significantly more strongly with stimulus intensity than that in the normally hearing subjects. This reflects loudness recruitment, characterized by a disproportionate increase in loudness with stimulus intensity. In contrast, the rate of activation increase as a function of loudness level did not differ between both subject groups. This demonstrates that fMRI activation at the level of the auditory cortex is more closely related to the percept of a stimulus (i.e., loudness) rather than to its physical characteristics (i.e., intensity). © 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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Langers, D., Backes, W., & Van Dijk, P. (2007). Brain Activation in Relation to Sound Intensity and Loudness. In Hearing – From Sensory Processing to Perception (pp. 227–235). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-540-73009-5_25

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