Abstract
Current tests of hearing fail to diagnose pathologies in ~10% of patients seeking help for hearing difficulties. Neural ensemble responses to perceptually relevant cues in the amplitude envelope, termed envelope following responses (EFR), hold promise as an objective diagnostic tool to probe these 'hidden' hearing difficulties. But clinical translation is impeded by current measurement approaches involving static amplitude modulated (AM) tones, which are time-consuming and lack optimal spectrotemporal resolution. Here we develop a framework to rapidly measure EFRs using dynamically varying AMs combined with spectrally specific analyses. These analyses offer 5x improvement in time and 30x improvement in spectrotemporal resolution, and more generally, are optimal for analyzing time-varying signals with known spectral trajectories of interest. We validate this approach across several mammalian species, including humans, and demonstrate robust responses that are highly correlated with traditional static EFRs. Our analytic technique facilitates rapid and objective neural assessment of temporal processing throughout the brain that can be applied to track auditory neurodegeneration using EFRs, as well as tracking recovery after therapeutic interventions.
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