Abstract

Due to the phase differences in the basilar membrane response between neighboring places along the cochlea, it is generally assumed that the processing of interaural time differences (ITDs) in the temporal fine structure relies on comparisons between corresponding frequency channels from the two ears. This study was aimed to test whether the auditory system is capable of extracting fine-structure ITDs from noncorresponding channels. For that, the ITD discrimination threshold was measured for a 500 Hz pure tone partially masked by a lowpass masker in one ear and a highpass masker in the other. The maskers were intended to obscure the apical or basal part of the tone's excitation pattern, respectively, and thus force the listener to extract ITDs from disparate channels. While the results did not allow any definite conclusions as to whether or not ITD processing in these conditions was based on cross-channel comparisons, some aspects of the data suggest that it was. Modeling simulations showed that any cross-channel comparisons would have to be limited to a fairly narrow frequency range of little more than one auditory-filter bandwidth. However, the between-channel phase differences within even such a narrow range would be sufficient to explain ITD sensitivity in neurophysiological data.

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