Bednar Adam, Boland Francis M, Lalor Edmund C
School of Engineering, Trinity Centre for Bioengineering and Trinity College Institute of Neuroscience, Trinity College Dublin, University of Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Department of Biomedical Engineering and Department of Neuroscience, University of Rochester, 500 Joseph C. Wilson Blvd. Box 270168, Rochester, NY 14611, USA.
Eur J Neurosci. 2017 Mar;45(5):679-689. doi: 10.1111/ejn.13524. Epub 2017 Feb 6.
The human ability to localize sound is essential for monitoring our environment and helps us to analyse complex auditory scenes. Although the acoustic cues mediating sound localization have been established, it remains unknown how these cues are represented in human cortex. In particular, it is still a point of contention whether binaural and monaural cues are processed by the same or distinct cortical networks. In this study, participants listened to a sequence of auditory stimuli from different spatial locations while we recorded their neural activity using electroencephalography (EEG). The stimuli were presented over a loudspeaker array, which allowed us to deliver realistic, free-field stimuli in both the horizontal and vertical planes. Using a multivariate classification approach, we showed that it is possible to decode sound source location from scalp-recorded EEG. Robust and consistent decoding was shown for stimuli that provide binaural cues (i.e. Left vs. Right stimuli). Decoding location when only monaural cues were available (i.e. Front vs. Rear and elevational stimuli) was successful for a subset of subjects and showed less consistency. Notably, the spatio-temporal pattern of EEG features that facilitated decoding differed based on the availability of binaural and monaural cues. In particular, we identified neural processing of binaural cues at around 120 ms post-stimulus and found that monaural cues are processed later between 150 and 200 ms. Furthermore, different spatial activation patterns emerged for binaural and monaural cue processing. These spatio-temporal dissimilarities suggest the involvement of separate cortical mechanisms in monaural and binaural acoustic cue processing.
人类定位声音的能力对于监测我们的环境至关重要,并有助于我们分析复杂的听觉场景。尽管介导声音定位的声学线索已经确定,但这些线索在人类大脑皮层中是如何表征的仍然未知。特别是,双耳线索和单耳线索是由相同还是不同的皮层网络处理,仍然存在争议。在这项研究中,参与者聆听来自不同空间位置的一系列听觉刺激,同时我们使用脑电图(EEG)记录他们的神经活动。刺激通过扬声器阵列呈现,这使我们能够在水平和垂直平面上传递逼真的自由场刺激。使用多变量分类方法,我们表明可以从头皮记录的脑电图中解码声源位置。对于提供双耳线索的刺激(即左对右刺激),显示出稳健且一致的解码。当仅提供单耳线索时(即前对后和仰角刺激),对一部分受试者成功解码位置,但一致性较低。值得注意的是,促进解码的脑电图特征的时空模式因双耳和单耳线索的可用性而异。特别是,我们在刺激后约120毫秒时识别出双耳线索的神经处理,并发现单耳线索在150至200毫秒之间处理得较晚。此外,双耳和单耳线索处理出现了不同的空间激活模式。这些时空差异表明在单耳和双耳声学线索处理中涉及不同的皮层机制。