After hearing a tone, the human auditory system becomes more sensitive to similar tones than to other tones. Current auditory models explain this phenomenon by a simple bandpass attention filter. Here, we demonstrate that auditory attention involves multiple pass-bands around octave-related frequencies above and below the cued tone. Intriguingly, this "octave effect" not only occurs for physically presented tones, but even persists for the missing fundamental in complex tones, and for imagined tones. Our results suggest neural interactions combining octave-related frequencies, likely located in nonprimary cortical regions. We speculate that this connectivity scheme evolved from exposure to natural vibrations containing octave-related spectral peaks, e.g., as produced by vocal cords.
CITATION STYLE
Borra, T., Versnel, H., Kemner, C., Van Opstal, A. J., & Van Ee, R. (2013). Octave effect in auditory attention. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 110(38), 15225–15230. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1213756110
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