Responses of auditory-cortex neurons to structural features of natural sounds

被引:248
作者
Nelken, I [1 ]
Rotman, Y [1 ]
Bar Yosef, O [1 ]
机构
[1] Hebrew Univ Jerusalem, Hadassah Med Sch, Dept Physiol, IL-91120 Jerusalem, Israel
关键词
D O I
10.1038/16456
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Sound-processing strategies that use the highly non-random structure off natural sounds may confer evolutionary advantage to many species. Auditory processing of natural sounds has been studied almost exclusively in the context of species-specific vocalizations(1-4), although these form only a small part of the acoustic biotope(5), To study the relationships between properties of natural soundscapes and neuronal processing mechanisms in the auditory system, we analysed sound from a range of different environments. Here we show that for many non-animal sounds and background mixtures of animal sounds, energy in different frequency bands is coherently modulated. Co-modulation of different frequency bands in background noise facilitates the detection of tones in noise by humans, a phenomenon known as co-modulation masking release (CMR)(6,7). We show that comodulation also improves the ability of auditory-cortex neurons to detect tones in noise, and we propose that this property of auditory neurons may underlie behavioural CMR. This correspondence may represent an adaptation of the auditory system for the use of an attribute of natural sounds to facilitate real-world processing tasks.
引用
收藏
页码:154 / 157
页数:4
相关论文
共 15 条
[1]   NEURAL REPRESENTATION OF THE ACOUSTIC BIOTOPE - EXISTENCE OF STIMULUS-EVENT RELATIONS FOR SENSORY NEURONS [J].
AERTSEN, AMHJ ;
SMOLDERS, JWT ;
JOHANNESMA, PIM .
BIOLOGICAL CYBERNETICS, 1979, 32 (03) :175-185
[2]   COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE FOR 3 TYPES OF MODULATOR AS A FUNCTION OF MODULATION RATE [J].
CARLYON, RP ;
BUUS, S ;
FLORENTINE, M .
HEARING RESEARCH, 1989, 42 (01) :37-45
[3]   TEMPORAL-MODULATION TRANSFER-FUNCTIONS FOR AM AND FM STIMULI IN CAT AUDITORY-CORTEX - EFFECTS OF CARRIER TYPE, MODULATING WAVE-FORM AND INTENSITY [J].
EGGERMONT, JJ .
HEARING RESEARCH, 1994, 74 (1-2) :51-66
[4]   DETECTION IN NOISE BY SPECTRO-TEMPORAL PATTERN-ANALYSIS [J].
HALL, JW ;
HAGGARD, MP ;
FERNANDES, MA .
JOURNAL OF THE ACOUSTICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 1984, 76 (01) :50-56
[5]   COMODULATION MASKING RELEASE IN A SONGBIRD [J].
KLUMP, GM ;
LANGEMANN, U .
HEARING RESEARCH, 1995, 87 (1-2) :157-164
[6]  
Pelleg-Toiba R., 1991, Journal of Basic and Clinical Physiology and Pharmacology, V2, P257
[7]   PROCESSING OF COMPLEX SOUNDS IN THE MACAQUE NONPRIMARY AUDITORY-CORTEX [J].
RAUSCHECKER, JP ;
TIAN, B ;
HAUSER, M .
SCIENCE, 1995, 268 (5207) :111-114
[8]  
RHODE WS, 1995, 18 ASS RES OT M ST P, P127
[9]   REVERBERATIONS AND AMPLITUDE FLUCTUATIONS IN THE PROPAGATION OF SOUND IN A FOREST - IMPLICATIONS FOR ANIMAL COMMUNICATION [J].
RICHARDS, DG ;
WILEY, RH .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 1980, 115 (03) :381-399
[10]   STATISTICS OF NATURAL IMAGES - SCALING IN THE WOODS [J].
RUDERMAN, DL ;
BIALEK, W .
PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS, 1994, 73 (06) :814-817