Rate and timing cues associated with the cochlear amplifier: Level discrimination based on monaural cross-frequency coincidence detection
The perceptual significance of the cochlear amplifier was evaluated by predicting level-discrimination performance based on stochastic auditory-nerve (AN) activity. Performance was calculated for three models of processing: the optimal all-information processor (based on discharge times), the optima...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America 2001-10, Vol.110 (4), p.2065-2084 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The perceptual
significance of the cochlear amplifier was evaluated by predicting level-discrimination performance
based on stochastic auditory-nerve (AN) activity. Performance was calculated for three
models of
processing: the optimal all-information processor (based on discharge times), the optimal
rate-place processor (based on discharge counts), and a monaural coincidence-based
processor that uses a non-optimal combination of rate and temporal information. An
analytical AN model included compressive magnitude and level-dependent-phase
responses associated with the cochlear amplifier, and high-, medium-, and low-spontaneous-rate
(SR) fibers with characteristic frequencies (CFs) spanning the AN population. The
relative contributions of nonlinear magnitude and nonlinear phase responses to level
encoding were
compared by using four versions of the model, which included and excluded the nonlinear gain and
phase responses in all possible combinations. Nonlinear basilar-membrane (BM) phase
responses are robustly encoded in near-CF AN fibers at low frequencies. Strongly
compressive BM responses at high frequencies near CF interact with the high thresholds of
low-SR AN fibers to produce large dynamic ranges. Coincidence performance based on a
narrow range of AN CFs was robust across a wide dynamic range at both low and high
frequencies, and matched human performance levels. Coincidence performance based on all
CFs demonstrated the “near-miss” to Weber’s law at low frequencies and the high-frequency
“mid-level bump.” Monaural coincidence detection is a physiologically realistic mechanism that is
extremely general in that it can utilize AN information (average-rate, synchrony, and
nonlinear-phase cues) from all SR groups. |
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ISSN: | 0001-4966 1520-8524 |
DOI: | 10.1121/1.1404977 |