Abstract
For amplitude-modulated sound, the envelope interaural time difference (ITDENV) is a potential cue for sound-source location. ITDENV is encoded in the lateral superior olive (LSO) of the auditory brainstem, by excitatory-inhibitory (EI) neurons receiving ipsilateral excitation and contralateral inhibition. Between human listeners, sensitivity to ITDENV varies considerably, but ultimately decreases with increasing stimulus carrier frequency, and decreases more strongly with increasing modulation rate. Mechanisms underlying the variation in behavioral sensitivity remain unclear. Here, with increasing carrier frequency (4-10kHz), as we phenomenologically model the associated decrease in ITDENV sensitivity using arbitrarily fewer neurons consistent across populations, we computationally model the variable sensitivity across human listeners and modulation rates (32-800Hz) as the decreasing range of membrane frequency responses in LSO neurons. Transposed tones stimulate a bilateral auditory-periphery model, driving model EI neurons where electrical membrane impedance filters the frequency content of inputs driven by amplitude-modulated sound, evoking modulation filtering. Calculated from Fisher information in spike-rate functions of ITDENV, for model EI neuronal populations distinctly reflecting the LSO range in membrane frequency responses, just-noticeable differences in ITDENV collectively reproduce the largest variation in ITDENV sensitivity across human listeners. These slow to fast model populations each generally match the best human ITDENV sensitivity at a progressively higher modulation rate, by membrane-filtering and spike-generation properties producing realistically less than Poisson variance. Non-resonant model EI neurons are also sensitive to interaural intensity differences. With peripheral filters centered between carrier frequency and modulation sideband, fast resonant model EI neurons extend ITDENV sensitivity above 500-Hz modulation.
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More From: Journal of the Association for Research in Otolaryngology : JARO
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