T Picton - Ear and hearing, 2013 - journals.lww.com
Time provides a fundamental dimension for perceiving sounds (Viemeister & Plack 1993; Eddins & Green 1995; Phillips 2012). Temporal processing is essential for the detection of …
Humans show a very robust ability to localize sounds in adverse conditions. Computational models of binaural sound localization and technical approaches of direction-of-arrival (DOA) …
Spatial hearing, and more specifically the ability to localize sounds in space, is one of the most studied and best understood aspects of hearing. Because there is no coding of …
Deaf people who use cochlear implants show surprisingly poor sensitivity to the temporal fine structure of sounds. One possible reason is that conventional cochlear implants cannot …
PX Joris, M van der Heijden - Annual review of neuroscience, 2019 - annualreviews.org
Many mammals, including humans, are exquisitely sensitive to tiny time differences between sounds at the two ears. These interaural time differences are an important source of …
SWF Meenderink, X Lin, BH Park, W Dong - Journal of the Association for …, 2022 - Springer
Human speech primarily contains low frequencies. It is well established that such frequencies maximally excite the cochlea near its apex. But, the micromechanics that …
The location and motion of sounds in space are important cues for encoding the auditory world. Spatial processing is a core component of auditory scene analysis, a cognitively …
J Encke, M Dietz - Communications biology, 2022 - nature.com
Sound in noise is better detected or understood if target and masking sources originate from different locations. Mammalian physiology suggests that the neurocomputational process …
The medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) receives excitatory input from giant presynaptic terminals, the calyces of Held. The MNTB functions as a sign inverter giving …