Abstract

The auditory brainstem response (ABR) is an electrophysiological measure of early auditory processing. While previous work has examined ABRs to clicks, tones, speech, and music, it remains unclear how changes in acoustic properties (e.g., frequency) map onto specific changes in ABR components. This may be partly due to filtering during data processing. High-pass filtering can severely distort cortical and subcortical responses, potentially obfuscating how stimuli are encoded. To address this, we measured ABRs to a wide range of pure tones (250 to 8000 Hz) and examined how high-pass filtering affects tone- and click-evoked ABRs. In Experiment 1, various high-pass filter settings (0.1-300 Hz) were applied to click-evoked ABRs. In Experiment 2, ABRs to brief tones across a six-step frequency continuum were collected, and the same high-pass filter settings were applied. Results indicate that excessive high-pass filtering diminishes the amplitude of ABR components, consistent with previous findings. In addition, filtering can obscure true effects of stimulus frequency. With appropriate filters, we find that the amplitude of wave V tracks stimulus frequency log-linearly, demonstrating that tonotopic organization is preserved and easily detectable early in processing. Future ABR work should minimize the use of high-pass filters when studying the encoding of acoustic information.

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