Heinz Michael G, Issa John B, Young Eric D
Center for Hearing Sciences and Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2005 Jun;6(2):91-105. doi: 10.1007/s10162-004-5043-0. Epub 2005 Jun 10.
A number of perceptual phenomena related to normal and impaired level coding can be accounted for by the degree of compression in the basilar-membrane (BM) magnitude response. However, the narrow dynamic ranges of auditory-nerve (AN) fibers complicate these arguments. Because the AN serves as an information bottleneck, an improved understanding of the neural coding of level may clarify some of the limitations of current hearing aids. Here three hypotheses for the neural correlate of loudness recruitment were evaluated based on AN responses from normal-hearing cats and from cats with a noise-induced hearing loss (NIHL). Auditory-nerve fiber rate-level functions for tones were analyzed to test the following hypotheses: Loudness recruitment results from steeper AN rate functions after impairment. This hypothesis was not supported; AN rate functions were not steeper than normal following NIHL, despite steeper estimated BM responses based on the AN data. Loudness is based on the total AN discharge count, and recruitment results from an abnormally rapid spread of excitation after impairment. Whereas abnormal spread of excitation can be observed, steeper growth of total AN rate is not seen over the range of sound levels where recruitment is observed in human listeners. Loudness of a narrowband stimulus is based on AN responses in a narrow BF region, and recruitment results from compression of the AN-fiber threshold distribution after impairment. This hypothesis was not supported because there was no evidence that impaired AN threshold distributions were compressed and the growth of AN activity summed across BFs near the stimulus frequency was shallower than normal.Overall, these results suggest that loudness recruitment cannot be accounted for based on summed AN rate responses and may depend on neural mechanisms involved in the central representation of intensity.
一些与正常和受损声级编码相关的感知现象可以用基底膜(BM)幅度响应中的压缩程度来解释。然而,听神经(AN)纤维狭窄的动态范围使这些观点变得复杂。由于听神经是一个信息瓶颈,对声级神经编码的更好理解可能会阐明当前助听器的一些局限性。在此,基于正常听力猫和噪声性听力损失(NIHL)猫的听神经反应,评估了响度重振神经关联的三种假设。分析了音调的听神经纤维发放率-声级函数,以检验以下假设:响度重振是由受损后更陡峭的听神经发放率函数引起的。这一假设未得到支持;尽管根据听神经数据估计的基底膜反应更陡峭,但噪声性听力损失后的听神经发放率函数并不比正常情况更陡峭。响度基于听神经总放电计数,重振是由受损后异常快速的兴奋扩散引起的。虽然可以观察到兴奋的异常扩散,但在人类听众出现重振的声级范围内,并未观察到听神经总发放率的更陡峭增长。窄带刺激的响度基于窄带最佳频率(BF)区域内的听神经反应,重振是由受损后听神经纤维阈值分布的压缩引起的。这一假设未得到支持,因为没有证据表明受损的听神经阈值分布被压缩,并且在刺激频率附近跨最佳频率求和的听神经活动增长比正常情况更平缓。总体而言,这些结果表明,响度重振不能基于听神经总发放率反应来解释,可能取决于强度中枢表征中涉及的神经机制。