中脑对包络结构的同步性支持对噪声中类似单音节元音的行为敏感性

Kenneth S Henry, Kristina S Abrams, Johanna Forst, Matthew J Mender, Erikson G Neilans, Fabio Idrobo, Laurel H Carney
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摘要

在自然条件下,元音对语音感知有很大贡献。元音在听觉神经中主要通过与时间精细结构和包络波动的神经同步而不是通过平均放电率进行编码。神经同步被认为对听觉中枢神经核的元音编码贡献较小,这与精细结构的同步较为有限以及包络波动的平均速率编码的出现相一致。然而,这一假说在很大程度上尚未被研究,尤其是在背景噪声中。本研究利用虎皮鹦鹉的神经生理学记录和匹配行为实验,考察了中脑水平的编码机制,该机制支持对简单元音类声音的行为敏感性。刺激物是能量集中在一个频谱峰值(或声母频率)的谐音复合体,在安静和噪声中均可呈现。随着刺激包络波动幅度的增大,声调-频率辨别的行为阈值也随之降低,在噪声中阈值升高,虎皮鹦鹉和人类的阈值相似。对清醒鸟类的多单元记录显示,中脑通过对包络结构的同步反应和平均速率对元音进行编码。基于这两种编码方案的神经辨别阈值都足以支持安静环境下的行为阈值,但只有基于同步的神经阈值才能解释背景噪声中的行为阈值。这些结果揭示了中脑中元音类声音向平均速率编码的不完全转变。模型模拟表明,这种转变的出现是由于调制调谐,这是鸟类和哺乳动物共有的。此外,这些结果还强调了中脑中的包络同步与在实际听觉条件下检测元音声母频率的微小差异的行为相关性。
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Midbrain Synchrony to Envelope Structure Supports Behavioral Sensitivity to Single-Formant Vowel-Like Sounds in Noise.

Vowels make a strong contribution to speech perception under natural conditions. Vowels are encoded in the auditory nerve primarily through neural synchrony to temporal fine structure and to envelope fluctuations rather than through average discharge rate. Neural synchrony is thought to contribute less to vowel coding in central auditory nuclei, consistent with more limited synchronization to fine structure and the emergence of average-rate coding of envelope fluctuations. However, this hypothesis is largely unexplored, especially in background noise. The present study examined coding mechanisms at the level of the midbrain that support behavioral sensitivity to simple vowel-like sounds using neurophysiological recordings and matched behavioral experiments in the budgerigar. Stimuli were harmonic tone complexes with energy concentrated at one spectral peak, or formant frequency, presented in quiet and in noise. Behavioral thresholds for formant-frequency discrimination decreased with increasing amplitude of stimulus envelope fluctuations, increased in noise, and were similar between budgerigars and humans. Multiunit recordings in awake birds showed that the midbrain encodes vowel-like sounds both through response synchrony to envelope structure and through average rate. Whereas neural discrimination thresholds based on either coding scheme were sufficient to support behavioral thresholds in quiet, only synchrony-based neural thresholds could account for behavioral thresholds in background noise. These results reveal an incomplete transformation to average-rate coding of vowel-like sounds in the midbrain. Model simulations suggest that this transformation emerges due to modulation tuning, which is shared between birds and mammals. Furthermore, the results underscore the behavioral relevance of envelope synchrony in the midbrain for detection of small differences in vowel formant frequency under real-world listening conditions.

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