Neural Mechanisms Underlying the Auditory Looming Bias

Karolina Ignatiadis, Diane Baier, B. Tóth, Robert Baumgartner
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Abstract

Our auditory system constantly keeps track of our environment, informing us about our surroundings and warning us of potential threats. The auditory looming bias is an early perceptual phenomenon, reflecting higher alertness of listeners to approaching auditory objects, rather than to receding ones. Experimentally, this sensation has been elicited by using both intensity-varying stimuli, as well as spectrally varying stimuli with constant intensity. Following the intensity-based approach, recent research delving into the cortical mechanisms underlying the looming bias argues for top-down signaling from the prefrontal cortex to the auditory cortex in order to prioritize approaching over receding sonic motion. We here test the generalizability of that finding to spectrally induced looms by re-analyzing previously published data. Our results indicate the promoted top-down projection but at time points slightly preceding the motion onset and thus considered to reflect a bias driven by anticipation. At time points following the motion onset, our findings show a bottom-up bias along the dorsal auditory pathway directed toward the prefrontal cortex.
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听觉隐现偏见背后的神经机制
我们的听觉系统不断地跟踪我们的环境,告诉我们周围的环境,并警告我们潜在的威胁。听觉隐现偏差是一种早期的感知现象,反映了听者对接近听觉对象的警觉性,而不是对后退的对象的警觉性。实验上,这种感觉可以通过使用强度变化的刺激和恒定强度的频谱变化刺激来引起。继基于强度的方法之后,最近的研究深入研究了隐现偏见背后的皮层机制,认为从前额叶皮层到听觉皮层的自上而下的信号,以优先考虑接近而不是后退的声音运动。我们在这里通过重新分析以前发表的数据来测试这一发现对频谱诱导织机的普遍性。我们的研究结果表明,自上而下的投射得到了提升,但在运动开始之前的时间点上,因此被认为反映了由预期驱动的偏见。在运动开始后的时间点上,我们的研究结果显示了沿背侧听觉通路指向前额皮质的自下而上的偏向。
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