Abstract

Dichotic pitches such as the Huggins pitch (HP) and the binaural edge pitch (BEP) are perceptual illusions whereby binaural noise that exhibits abrupt changes in interaural phase differences (IPDs) across frequency creates a tonelike pitch percept when presented to both ears, even though it does not produce a pitch when presented monaurally. At the perceptual and cortical levels, dichotic pitches behave as if an actual tone had been presented to the ears, yet investigations of neural correlates of dichotic pitch in single-unit responses at subcortical levels are lacking. We tested for cues to HP and BEP in the responses of binaural neurons in the auditory midbrain of anesthetized cats by varying the expected pitch frequency around each neuron's best frequency (BF). Neuronal firing rates showed specific features (peaks, troughs, or edges) when the pitch frequency crossed the BF, and the type of feature was consistent with a well-established model of binaural processing comprising frequency tuning, internal delays, and firing rates sensitive to interaural correlation. A Jeffress-like neural population model in which the behavior of individual neurons was governed by the cross-correlation model and the neurons were independently distributed along BF and best IPD predicted trends in human psychophysical HP detection but only when the model incorporated physiological BF and best IPD distributions. These results demonstrate the existence of a rate-place code for HP and BEP in the auditory midbrain and provide a firm physiological basis for models of dichotic pitches.NEW & NOTEWORTHY Dichotic pitches are perceptual illusions created centrally through binaural interactions that offer an opportunity to test theories of pitch and binaural hearing. Here we show that binaural neurons in auditory midbrain encode the frequency of two salient types of dichotic pitches via specific features in the pattern of firing rates along the tonotopic axis. This is the first combined single-unit and modeling study of responses of auditory neurons to stimuli evoking a dichotic pitch.

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