Abstract

The detection of interaural time differences (ITD) for sound localization depends on the similarity between the left and right ear signals, namely interaural correlation (IAC). Human localization performance deteriorates with decreasing IACs. In order to examine activity related to localization performance in the human cortex, auditory evoked magnetic fields to the ITD of bandpass noises with different IACs were analyzed. When the IAC was 0.95, the N1m amplitudes, i.e., the estimated equivalent current dipole moments, increased with increasing ITD. However the effect of ITD on the N1m amplitudes was not significant when the IAC was 0.5. When the ITD was 0.7 ms, the N1m amplitudes decreased with decreasing IACs. There were no systematic changes in the source location of N1m in the auditory cortex related to changes in ITD or IAC. The results suggest that localization performance is reflected in N1m amplitudes.

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