Activity in human auditory cortex represents spatial separation between concurrent sounds

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Abstract

The primary and posterior auditory cortex (AC) are known for their sensitivity to spatial information, but how this information is processedis not yet understood. ACthat issensitivetospatial manipulations is alsomodulatedbythenumber of auditorystreams present in a scene (Smith et al., 2010), suggesting that spatial and nonspatial cues are integrated for stream segregation. We reasoned that, if this is the case, then it is the distance between sounds rather than their absolute positions that is essential. To test this hypothesis, we measured human brain activity in response to spatially separated concurrent sounds with fMRI at 7 tesla in five men and five women. Stimuli were spatialized amplitude-modulated broadband noises recorded for each participant via in-ear microphones before scanning. Using a linear support vector machine classifier, we investigated whether sound location and/or location plus spatial separation between sounds could be decoded from the activity in Heschl’s gyrus and the planum temporale. The classifier was successful only when comparing patterns associated with the conditions that had the largest difference in perceptual spatial separation. Our pattern of results suggests that the representation of spatial separation is not merely the combination of single locations, but rather is an independent feature of the auditory scene.

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APA

Shiell, M. M., Hausfeld, L., & Formisano, E. (2018). Activity in human auditory cortex represents spatial separation between concurrent sounds. Journal of Neuroscience, 38(21), 4977–4984. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3323-17.2018

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