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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 6 June 1999, pp. 2720-2736
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Medical Physics and Biophysics, University of Nijmegen, NL-6525 EZ Nijmegen, The Netherlands
Goossens, H.H.L.M. and
A. J. van Opstal.
Influence of Head Position on the Spatial Representation of
Acoustic Targets. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2720-2736, 1999.
Influence of head position on the spatial representation of acoustic
targets. Sound localization in humans relies on binaural differences (azimuth cues) and monaural spectral shape information (elevation cues) and is therefore the result of a neural computational process. Despite the fact that these acoustic cues are referenced with
respect to the head, accurate eye movements can be generated to sounds
in complete darkness. This ability necessitates the use of eye position
information. So far, however, sound localization has been investigated
mainly with a fixed head position, usually straight ahead. Yet the
auditory system may rely on head motor information to maintain a stable
and spatially accurate representation of acoustic targets in the
presence of head movements. We therefore studied the influence of
changes in eye-head position on auditory-guided orienting behavior of
human subjects. In the first experiment, we used a visual-auditory
double-step paradigm. Subjects made saccadic gaze shifts in total
darkness toward brief broadband sounds presented before an intervening
eye-head movement that was evoked by an earlier visual target. The data
show that the preceding displacements of both eye and head are fully
accounted for, resulting in spatially accurate responses. This suggests that auditory target information may be transformed into a spatial (or
body-centered) frame of reference. To further investigate this
possibility, we exploited the unique property of the auditory system
that sound elevation is extracted independently from pinna-related spectral cues. In the absence of such cues, accurate elevation detection is not possible, even when head movements are made. This is
shown in a second experiment where pure tones were localized at a fixed
elevation that depended on the tone frequency rather than on the actual
target elevation, both under head-fixed and -free conditions. To test,
in a third experiment, whether the perceived elevation of tones relies
on a head- or space-fixed target representation, eye
movements were elicited toward pure tones while subjects kept their
head in different vertical positions. It appeared that each tone was
localized at a fixed, frequency-dependent elevation in space that
shifted to a limited extent with changes in head elevation. Hence
information about head position is used under static conditions too.
Interestingly, the influence of head position also depended on the tone
frequency. Thus tone-evoked ocular saccades typically showed a partial
compensation for changes in static head position, whereas noise-evoked
eye-head saccades fully compensated for intervening changes in eye-head
position. We propose that the auditory localization system combines the acoustic input with head-position information to encode targets in a
spatial (or body-centered) frame of reference. In this way, accurate
orienting responses may be programmed despite intervening eye-head
movements. A conceptual model, based on the tonotopic organization of
the auditory system, is presented that may account for our findings.
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