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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 84 No. 2 August 2000, pp. 1107-1111
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
RAPID COMMUNICATION
1Institute for Occupational Physiology at the University of Dortmund, D-44139 Dortmund; and 2Department of Cognitive Neurology, University of Tübingen, D-72076 Tubingen, Germany
Lewald, Jörg and
Hans-Otto Karnath.
Vestibular Influence on Human Auditory Space Perception. J. Neurophysiol. 84: 1107-1111, 2000. We
investigated the effect of vestibular stimulation on the lateralization
of dichotic sound by cold-water irrigation of the external auditory
canal in human subjects. Subjects adjusted the interaural level
difference of the auditory stimulus to the subjective median plane of
the head. In those subjects in whom dizziness and nystagmus indicated
sufficient vestibular stimulation, these adjustments were significantly
shifted toward the cooled ear compared with the control condition
(irrigation with water at body temperature); i.e., vestibular
stimulation induced a shift of the sound image toward the nonstimulated
side. The mean magnitude of the shift was 7.3 dB immediately after
vestibular stimulation and decreased to 2.5 dB after 5 min. As shown by
an additional control experiment, this effect cannot be attributed to a
unilateral hearing loss induced by cooling of the auditory periphery.
The results indicate the involvement of vestibular afferent information
in the perception of sound location during movements of the head and/or
the whole body. We thus hypothesize that vestibular information is used by central-nervous mechanisms generating a world-centered
representation of auditory space.
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