Abstract

Sound localization requires the integration in the brain of auditory spatial cues generated by interactions with the external ears, head and body. Perceptual learning studies have shown that the relative weighting of these cues can change in a context-dependent fashion if their relative reliability is altered. One factor that may influence this process is vision, which tends to dominate localization judgments when both modalities are present and induces a recalibration of auditory space if they become misaligned. It is not known, however, whether vision can alter the weighting of individual auditory localization cues. Using virtual acoustic space stimuli, we measured changes in subjects’ sound localization biases and binaural localization cue weights after ∼50 min of training on audiovisual tasks in which visual stimuli were either informative or not about the location of broadband sounds. Four different spatial configurations were used in which we varied the relative reliability of the binaural cues: interaural time differences (ITDs) and frequency-dependent interaural level differences (ILDs). In most subjects and experiments, ILDs were weighted more highly than ITDs before training. When visual cues were spatially uninformative, some subjects showed a reduction in auditory localization bias and the relative weighting of ILDs increased after training with congruent binaural cues. ILDs were also upweighted if they were paired with spatially-congruent visual cues, and the largest group-level improvements in sound localization accuracy occurred when both binaural cues were matched to visual stimuli. These data suggest that binaural cue reweighting reflects baseline differences in the relative weights of ILDs and ITDs, but is also shaped by the availability of congruent visual stimuli. Training subjects with consistently misaligned binaural and visual cues produced the ventriloquism aftereffect, i.e., a corresponding shift in auditory localization bias, without affecting the inter-subject variability in sound localization judgments or their binaural cue weights. Our results show that the relative weighting of different auditory localization cues can be changed by training in ways that depend on their reliability as well as the availability of visual spatial information, with the largest improvements in sound localization likely to result from training with fully congruent audiovisual information.

Highlights

  • IntroductionAccurate sound localization is achieved by integrating binaural cues (interaural level and time differences; interaural level differences (ILDs) and interaural time differences (ITDs)) and location-dependent spectral cues, which together constitute the head-related transfer function (HRTF)

  • Accurate sound localization is achieved by integrating binaural cues and location-dependent spectral cues, which together constitute the head-related transfer function (HRTF)

  • We found no overall change in binaural weighting in the other experiments, the regression slopes indicate that when visual cues signaled that interaural level differences (ILDs) were unreliable (AV+, random-ILD) or that both cues were inaccurate (AV+, natural-10), there was a tendency for the weighting of whichever cue contributed less at baseline to increase as a result of training (Figures 7G,H)

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Summary

Introduction

Accurate sound localization is achieved by integrating binaural cues (interaural level and time differences; ILDs and ITDs) and location-dependent spectral cues, which together constitute the head-related transfer function (HRTF). The auditory system can adapt rapidly to distortions in spatial hearing by giving greater weight for azimuthal localization to the cues that are less affected by the perturbation, i.e., the unchanged spectral cues provided by the non-occluded ear. Recent work in ferrets (Keating et al, 2013, 2015, 2016) and humans (Keating et al, 2016) has shown that such adaptation can be achieved either by up-weighting these cues or by learning a new relationship between the altered binaural cues and directions in space, depending on the spectral content of the stimuli used and the localization cues that are available

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