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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 5 November 1999, pp. 2294-2309
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
University Laboratory of Physiology, Oxford OX1 3PT, United Kingdom
Parsons, Carl H.,
Richard G. Lanyon,
Jan
W. H. Schnupp, and
Andrew J. King.
Effects of Altering Spectral Cues in Infancy on Horizontal and
Vertical Sound Localization by Adult Ferrets. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 2294-2309, 1999. We investigated the
behavioral consequences of removing the pinna and concha of the
external ear bilaterally in infancy on the sound localization ability
of adult ferrets. Altering spectral cues in this manner has previously
been shown to disrupt the development of the neural representation of
auditory space in the superior colliculus. Using broadband noise
stimuli, we tested pinnae-removed ferrets and normal ferrets in three
sound localization tasks. In each case, we found that both groups of
animals performed significantly better when longer duration noise
bursts were used. In a relative localization task, we measured the
acuity with which the ferrets could discriminate between two speakers
in the horizontal plane. The speakers were placed symmetrically either
around the anterior midline or around a position 45° lateral to the
midline. In this task, the pinnae-removed ferrets achieved very similar
scores to the normal ferrets. By contrast, in another relative
localization task that measured localization ability in the midsagittal
plane, pinnae-removed ferrets performed less well than normals. In an absolute localization task, 12 speakers were spaced at 30° intervals in the horizontal plane at the level of the ferrets' ears. Overall, the pinnae-removed ferrets also performed poorly in this task compared
with normal ferrets: they made significantly fewer correct responses,
larger localization errors and more front-back errors. Both normal and
pinnae-removed animals showed an improvement in performance with
practice, although the pattern of improvement differed for each group.
The largest improvements in localization accuracy were achieved by the
pinnae-removed ferrets, particularly at the frontal positions, and
their performance eventually approached that of the normal animals.
Nevertheless, some intergroup differences were still present. In
particular, the pinnae-removed ferrets continued to make significantly
more front-back errors than the normals. These deficits can be
attributed to differences in the spectral localization cues available
to the animals. Acoustical measurements showed that, compared with
normal animals, the head-related transfer functions in the horizontal
plane were largely ambiguous around the interaural axis and also
contained fewer location-dependent features in the midsagittal plane.
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