Talavage Thomas M, Sereno Martin I, Melcher Jennifer R, Ledden Patrick J, Rosen Bruce R, Dale Anders M
Speech and Hearing Sciences Program, Massachusetts Institute of Technology-Harvard Division of Health Sciences and Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02139, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2004 Mar;91(3):1282-96. doi: 10.1152/jn.01125.2002. Epub 2003 Nov 12.
Functional neuroimaging experiments have revealed an organization of frequency-dependent responses in human auditory cortex suggestive of multiple tonotopically organized areas. Numerous studies have sampled cortical responses to isolated narrow-band stimuli, revealing multiple locations in auditory cortex at which the position of response varies systematically with frequency content. Because appropriate anatomical or functional grouping of these distinct frequency-dependent responses is uncertain, the number and location of tonotopic mappings within human auditory cortex remains unclear. Further, sampling does not address whether the observed mappings exhibit continuity as a function of position. This functional magnetic resonance imaging study used frequency-swept stimuli to identify progressions of frequency sensitivity across the cortical surface. The center-frequency of narrow-band, amplitude-modulated noise was slowly swept between 125 and 8,000 Hz. The latency of response relative to sweep onset was determined for each cortical surface location. Because frequency varied systematically with time, response latency indicated the frequency to which a location was maximally sensitive. Areas of cortex exhibiting a progressive change in response latency with position were considered tonotopically organized. There exist two main findings. First, six progressions of frequency sensitivity (i.e., tonotopic mappings) were repeatably observed in the superior temporal plane. Second, the locations of the higher- and lower-frequency endpoints of these progressions were approximately congruent with regions reported to be most responsive to discrete higher- and lower-frequency stimuli. Based on these findings and previous anatomical work, we propose a correspondence between these progressions and anatomically defined cortical areas, suggesting that five areas in human auditory cortex exhibit at least six tonotopic organizations.
功能性神经成像实验揭示了人类听觉皮层中频率依赖性反应的一种组织方式,这表明存在多个呈音频拓扑组织的区域。众多研究对皮层对孤立窄带刺激的反应进行了采样,揭示了听觉皮层中多个位置,在这些位置,反应的位置会随着频率成分系统地变化。由于这些不同的频率依赖性反应的适当解剖学或功能分组尚不确定,人类听觉皮层内音频拓扑映射的数量和位置仍不清楚。此外,采样并未解决所观察到的映射是否表现出作为位置函数的连续性。这项功能磁共振成像研究使用频率扫描刺激来识别跨皮层表面的频率敏感性进展。窄带、调幅噪声的中心频率在125至8000赫兹之间缓慢扫描。确定每个皮层表面位置相对于扫描开始的反应潜伏期。由于频率随时间系统地变化,反应潜伏期表明一个位置对其最敏感的频率。皮层中反应潜伏期随位置呈现渐进变化的区域被认为是呈音频拓扑组织的。有两个主要发现。第一,在颞上平面可重复观察到六个频率敏感性进展(即音频拓扑映射)。第二,这些进展的高频和低频端点的位置与据报道对离散高频和低频刺激反应最强烈的区域大致一致。基于这些发现和先前的解剖学研究,我们提出这些进展与解剖学定义的皮层区域之间的对应关系,这表明人类听觉皮层中的五个区域至少呈现出六种音频拓扑组织。