Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA. Electronic address: https://www.brainvolts.northwestern.edu.
Auditory Neuroscience Laboratory, Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA; Department of Neurobiology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, 60208, USA.
Hear Res. 2019 Oct;382:107779. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2019.107779. Epub 2019 Aug 8.
The frequency-following response, or FFR, is a neurophysiological response to sound that precisely reflects the ongoing dynamics of sound. It can be used to study the integrity and malleability of neural encoding of sound across the lifespan. Sound processing in the brain can be impaired with pathology and enhanced through expertise. The FFR can index linguistic deprivation, autism, concussion, and reading impairment, and can reflect the impact of enrichment with short-term training, bilingualism, and musicianship. Because of this vast potential, interest in the FFR has grown considerably in the decade since our first tutorial. Despite its widespread adoption, there remains a gap in the current knowledge of its analytical potential. This tutorial aims to bridge this gap. Using recording methods we have employed for the last 20 + years, we have explored many analysis strategies. In this tutorial, we review what we have learned and what we think constitutes the most effective ways of capturing what the FFR can tell us. The tutorial covers FFR components (timing, fundamental frequency, harmonics) and factors that influence FFR (stimulus polarity, response averaging, and stimulus presentation/recording jitter). The spotlight is on FFR analyses, including ways to analyze FFR timing (peaks, autocorrelation, phase consistency, cross-phaseogram), magnitude (RMS, SNR, FFT), and fidelity (stimulus-response correlations, response-to-response correlations and response consistency). The wealth of information contained within an FFR recording brings us closer to understanding how the brain reconstructs our sonic world.
频率跟随反应(FFR)是一种对声音的神经生理反应,它能精确地反映声音的持续动态。它可以用于研究声音在整个生命周期中的神经编码的完整性和可变性。大脑的声音处理能力可能会因病变而受损,也可能因专业知识而增强。FFR 可以评估语言剥夺、自闭症、脑震荡和阅读障碍,并可以反映短期训练、双语和音乐训练的影响。由于其巨大的潜力,自我们的第一篇教程发布以来,十年来人们对 FFR 的兴趣大大增加。尽管它被广泛采用,但它在分析潜力方面仍存在知识差距。本教程旨在弥合这一差距。使用我们过去 20 多年来使用的记录方法,我们探索了许多分析策略。在本教程中,我们回顾了我们所学到的知识,以及我们认为最有效的捕捉 FFR 所能告诉我们的信息的方法。本教程涵盖了 FFR 的组成部分(时间、基频、谐波)和影响 FFR 的因素(刺激极性、响应平均和刺激呈现/记录抖动)。重点是 FFR 分析,包括分析 FFR 时间(峰、自相关、相位一致性、交叉相位图)、幅度(RMS、SNR、FFT)和保真度(刺激-响应相关性、响应-响应相关性和响应一致性)的方法。FFR 记录中包含的大量信息使我们更接近理解大脑如何重建我们的声音世界。