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J Neurophysiol 97: 715-726, 2007. First published October 25, 2006; doi:10.1152/jn.00260.2006
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Sound Localization Under Perturbed Binaural Hearing

Marc M. Van Wanrooij1,2 and A. John Van Opstal1

1Department of Biophysics, Radboud University Nijmegen, Nijmegen; and 2Department of Neuroscience, Erasmus University Rotterdam Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands

Submitted 10 March 2006; accepted in final form 20 October 2006

This paper reports on the acute effects of a monaural plug on directional hearing in the horizontal (azimuth) and vertical (elevation) planes of human listeners. Sound localization behavior was tested with rapid head-orienting responses toward brief high-pass filtered (>3 kHz; HP) and broadband (0.5–20 kHz; BB) noises, with sound levels between 30 and 60 dB, A-weighted (dBA). To deny listeners any consistent azimuth-related head-shadow cues, stimuli were randomly interleaved. A plug immediately degraded azimuth performance, as evidenced by a sound level–dependent shift ("bias") of responses contralateral to the plug, and a level-dependent change in the slope of the stimulus–response relation ("gain"). Although the azimuth bias and gain were highly correlated, they could not be predicted from the plug's acoustic attenuation. Interestingly, listeners performed best for low-intensity stimuli at their normal-hearing side. These data demonstrate that listeners rely on monaural spectral cues for sound-source azimuth localization as soon as the binaural difference cues break down. Also the elevation response components were affected by the plug: elevation gain depended on both stimulus azimuth and on sound level and, as for azimuth, localization was best for low-intensity stimuli at the hearing side. Our results show that the neural computation of elevation incorporates a binaural weighting process that relies on the perceived, rather than the actual, sound-source azimuth. It is our conjecture that sound localization ensues from a weighting of all acoustic cues for both azimuth and elevation, in which the weights may be partially determined, and rapidly updated, by the reliability of the particular cue.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: A. J. Van Opstal, Department of Biophysics, Radboud University Nijmegen, Geert Grooteplein 21, 6525 EZ Nijmegen, The Netherlands (E-mail: J.vanOpstal{at}science.ru.nl)







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