Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
Plasticity and Signal Representation in the Auditory System
Josef Syka ; Michael M. Merzenich (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
Neurosciences; Human Physiology; Animal Anatomy / Morphology / Histology
Disponibilidad
| Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No detectada | 2005 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-0-387-23154-9
ISBN electrónico
978-0-387-23181-5
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer Science+Business Media, Inc. 2005
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Perception of the Direction of Frequency Sweeps in Moving Ripple Noise Stimuli
Susan L. Denham
Subjects can differentiate between upward and downward moving spectral envelope patterns within a circumscribed range of spectral profiles and drift rates. The range for accurate performance appears to be consistent with spectral resolution in the periphery and the receptive field characteristics found in auditory cortex. The presence of multiple peaks in the spectral profile helps discrimination at low sweep rates, while at higher rates discrimination is better if only one moving peak is present. In conclusion, these experiments have shown that subjects are sensitive to the spectrotemporal envelope of stimuli in the absence of meaningful fine structure, within the range of spectral peak densities and sweep rates characteristic of speech.
- Psychoacoustics, Speech and Music Perception | Pp. 317-322
Rippled-Spectrum Resolution as a Measure of Frequency Resolving Power of Hearing
Alexander Ya. Supin
Since negotiators are decision-makers, understanding a negotiation requires a deep understanding of the negotiators’ decisions. As Hayek suggests, the theoretical foundations in this chapter address decision-making and preferences from the viewpoint of different disciplines. The origin of preferences and their stability over time varies widely across fields: Economists, for example, usually assume preferences to be an underlying property of any individual and to be stable over time. If an agent’s choice changes over time, then either the production technology available or the information at hand have changed—preferences do not. This widely used perspective is most notably vindicated by Stigler and Becker (1977) in a seminal paper arguing against the assumption of changing preferences and it is outlined in several microeconomic textbooks, e.g. Kreps (1990), Varian (1992), Mas-Colell, Whinston, and Green (1995).
- Psychoacoustics, Speech and Music Perception | Pp. 323-328
Low Frequency Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) in Brain Hyperexcitability Disorders Like Tinnitus and Auditory Hallucinations
Berthold Langguth; Peter Eichhammer; Joerg Marienhagen; Tobias Kleinjung; Philipp Sand; Goeran Hajak
Our findings support the hypothesis that tinnitus - like auditory hallucinations - is associated with hyperexcitability in the auditory cortex. The several weeks-long lasting effects assessed with objective (cortical excitability) and subjective (tinnitus sensation) measures demonstrate the potential of rTMS to alter cortical excitability and to improve the symptomatology of neuropsychiatric syndroms classified as hyperexcitability disorders.
- Psychoacoustics, Speech and Music Perception | Pp. 329-334
Effects of Long Term Unilateral Hearing Loss on the Lateralization of fMRI Measured Activation in Human Auditory Cortex
David R. Moore; Joseph T. Devlin; Josephine Raley; Elizabeth Tunbridge; Katherine Lanary; Anna Floyer-Lea; Charvy Narain; Ian Cohen; Peter Jezzard; Martin J. Burton; Paul M. Matthews
c-Fos immunocytochemistry is used for labelling activated neurons in studies of auditory cortical processing of communication sounds in mice. Activation of the primary auditory fields AI and AAF does not discriminate between sounds of high or low behavioural significance. Labelling related to call recognition occurs in the second auditory field AIL Activation in another auditory field of higher order, the dorsoposterior field DP, seems to be related to an integration of call recognition with the emotional/motivational background of the animals. A left-hemisphere advantage of activation in this field is associated with higher levels of maternal emotions. These data on auditory cortical activation fit excellently to perception data of communication calls in mice.
- Plasticity of the Auditory System in Man | Pp. 335-346
Arguments in Favor of Auditory Reorganization in Human Subjects with Cochlear Damage
Hung Thai-Van; Damien Gabriel; Lionel Collet
Overall results confirm the improvement in frequency discrimination performance around the cutoff frequency in subjects with steeply sloping hearing loss. This effect does not appear to depend on the pattern of the hearing loss, as it can be observed in subjects with low-frequency, as well as notched hearing losses. Our findings, pointing to the steepness of the hearing loss and the presence of dead cochlear regions as the most important factors of the local DLF enhancement effect, are consistent with an interpretation in terms of injury-induced central auditory reorganization. The reversal of this plasticity after amplification may open some interesting therapeutic horizons. In particular, the benefit of hearing amplification might be conditioned by the occurrence of a secondary plasticity. This issue needs to be investigated by further research.
- Plasticity of the Auditory System in Man | Pp. 347-353
Central Auditory Processing and Language Learning Impairments: Implications for Neuroplasticity Research
Paula Tallal; R. Holly Fitch
The results of the present study document that a significant low-frequency hearing loss occurrs as early as in one-month-old F344 rats and results in a lack of recordable TEOAEs and in the absence of DPOAEs at low frequencies. The low-frequency defect, which preceeds the later occurring high-frequency hearing loss, is probably not connected with the degeneration of hair cells or specific age-related hearing loss genes, but can be related to more general genetic mutations present in this rat strain.
- Plasticity of the Auditory System in Man | Pp. 355-385
Neuroplastic Adaptations of the Auditory System in Musicians and Nonmusicians
Larry E. Roberts; Daniel J. Bosnyak; Antoine Shahin; Laurel J. Trainor
Subjects can differentiate between upward and downward moving spectral envelope patterns within a circumscribed range of spectral profiles and drift rates. The range for accurate performance appears to be consistent with spectral resolution in the periphery and the receptive field characteristics found in auditory cortex. The presence of multiple peaks in the spectral profile helps discrimination at low sweep rates, while at higher rates discrimination is better if only one moving peak is present. In conclusion, these experiments have shown that subjects are sensitive to the spectrotemporal envelope of stimuli in the absence of meaningful fine structure, within the range of spectral peak densities and sweep rates characteristic of speech.
- Plasticity of the Auditory System in Man | Pp. 387-394
Functional and Structural Characteristics of Auditory Cortex in the Blind
Alexander A. Stevens
Since negotiators are decision-makers, understanding a negotiation requires a deep understanding of the negotiators’ decisions. As Hayek suggests, the theoretical foundations in this chapter address decision-making and preferences from the viewpoint of different disciplines. The origin of preferences and their stability over time varies widely across fields: Economists, for example, usually assume preferences to be an underlying property of any individual and to be stable over time. If an agent’s choice changes over time, then either the production technology available or the information at hand have changed—preferences do not. This widely used perspective is most notably vindicated by Stigler and Becker (1977) in a seminal paper arguing against the assumption of changing preferences and it is outlined in several microeconomic textbooks, e.g. Kreps (1990), Varian (1992), Mas-Colell, Whinston, and Green (1995).
- Plasticity of the Auditory System in Man | Pp. 395-400