1 / 41

Hearing in the Environment 1

Hearing in the Environment 1. PSY 295 – Sensation & Perception Christopher DiMattina , PhD. Sound localization. The problem of auditory localization. In vision, it is easy to tell where something is in space by its position on the retina C ochlea is organized by frequency rather than space

elaine
Download Presentation

Hearing in the Environment 1

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hearing in the Environment 1 PSY 295 – Sensation & Perception Christopher DiMattina, PhD

  2. Sound localization PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  3. The problem of auditory localization • In vision, it is easy to tell where something is in space by its position on the retina • Cochlea is organized by frequency rather than space • Sound location must be computed by the brain PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  4. Problem of sound localization PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  5. Planes of localization PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  6. Cues for azimuthal localization PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  7. Cues for horizontal plane • Sounds travel different distances to get to two ears • Sounds are louder in closer ear PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  8. Cues for horizontal plane • High frequencies are attenuated by head • Low frequencies travel around head and are not attenuated PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  9. Question • Which frequencies would have stronger cue for loudness difference (inter-aural level difference – ILD)? • Which frequencies would have stronger cue for time or phase differences (inter-aural time difference)? PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  10. Duplex theory PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  11. Interaural Level Differences PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  12. ILD ineffective at low frequencies PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  13. ILD effective at high frequencies PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  14. Interaural timing differences • Sound takes longer to reach one ear than the other PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  15. ITD for head positions • Largest ITD is 0.64 milliseconds PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  16. ITD PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  17. ILD + ITD are not entirely sufficient • Cone of confusion PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  18. Head movements help PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  19. Computing ITD & ILD in the Brain PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  20. Auditory Brainstem Nuclei • Lateral Superior Olive (LSO) • Medial Superior Olive (MSO) • One synapse from cochlear nucleus PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  21. Auditory Brainstem Nuclei • MSO – inter-aural time differences (ITD) • LSO – inter-aural level differences (ILD) PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  22. LSO codes IID PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  23. Neural circuit in brain slice PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  24. Neural circuit PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  25. MSO codes ITD PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  26. Jeffress model PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  27. Cool animation • http://mustelid.physiol.ox.ac.uk/drupal/?q=topics/jeffress-model-animation PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  28. Anatomical evidence PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  29. Localization in 3-D PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  30. How do we localize in elevation? PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  31. Pinna PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  32. Pinna filters sounds PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  33. Notch location varies with elevation PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  34. Spectral elevation cues PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  35. Neurons tuned for spectral notches • Neurons in the inferior colliculus and dorsal cochlear nucleus exhibit tuning for spectral notches PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  36. Different solution in barn owls • One ear points up, the other points down • ILD provides a cue for elevation PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  37. Map of auditory space • The barn owl homologue of the inferior colliculus has a topographical map of auditory space • Mammalian IC does not have such a neat map PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  38. Cues for distance • How do we tell the distance of sounds? • Loudness – distance confound • Analogous to problem of depth perception in vision PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  39. Cues for distance • Movement can help (analogous to motion parallax) • Greater attenuation of high frequencies with distance (analogous to aerial haze) PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  40. Reverberation • Nearby sounds take more direct path • Far away sounds bounce off things PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

  41. Acknowledgements • Many figures taken from the following websites • David Heeger @ NYU • Center for Hearing Science @ JHU PSY 295 - Grinnell College - Fall 2012

More Related