The Journal of Neuroscience, July 16, 2003, 23(15):6345-6350
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BRIEF COMMUNICATION
Interaural Time Sensitivity Dominated by Cochlea-Induced Envelope Patterns
Philip X. Joris1,2
1Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Medical
School, Campus Gasthuisberg, K. U. Leuven, B-3000 Leuven, Belgium, and
2Department of Physiology, University of Wisconsin,
Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin 53706.
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Abstract
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To localize sounds in space, humans heavily depend on minute interaural
time differences (ITDs) generated by path-length differences to the two ears.
Physiological studies of ITD sensitivity have mostly used deterministic,
periodic sounds, in which either the waveform fine structure or a sinusoidal
envelope is delayed interaurally. For natural broadband stimuli, however,
auditory frequency selectivity causes individual channels to have their own
envelopes; the temporal code in these channels is thus a mixture of fine
structure and envelope. This study introduces a method to disentangle the
contributions of fine structure and envelope in both binaural and monaural
responses to broadband noise. In the inferior colliculus (IC) of the cat, a
population of neurons was found in which envelope fluctuations dominate ITD
sensitivity. This population extends over a surprisingly wide range of
frequencies, including low frequencies for which fine-structure information is
also available. A comparison with the auditory nerve suggests that an
elaboration of envelope coding occurs between the nerve and the IC. These
results suggest that internally generated envelopes play a more important role
in binaural hearing than is commonly thought.
Key words: sound localization; binaural; coincidence detection; inferior colliculus; auditory nerve; phase-locking; temporal coding
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Introduction
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Humans have an exquisite ability to compare temporal information in the
waveforms of sounds to the two ears. Two basic forms of interaural temporal
sensitivity have been identified psychophysically: to the detailed time
waveform or "fine structure" of low-frequency sounds and to the
amplitude fluctuations or "envelope" of high-frequency sounds
(Strutt, 1907
;
Zwislocki and Feldman, 1956
;
Henning, 1974
;
Nuetzel and Hafter, 1976
;
Bernstein and Trahiotis, 1994
).
Ample evidence documents two corresponding physiological forms of interaural
time difference (ITD) sensitivity to fine structure
(Rose et al., 1966
;
Goldberg and Brown, 1969
;
Moiseff and Konishi, 1981
;
Yin and Chan, 1990
) and to
envelopes (Yin et al., 1984
;
Batra et al., 1989
;
Joris and Yin, 1995
).
Natural sounds such as speech generally span a wide range of frequencies
and provide both fine-structure and envelope cues. However, it is unknown how
the two forms of ITD sensitivity (to fine structure and to envelopes)
physiologically interact in response to wideband sounds. Previous studies of
ITD sensitivity to noise focused on low frequencies and did not specifically
examine the influence of envelopes on the responses. On the other hand,
studies of ITD sensitivity to envelopes have only used high-frequency
amplitude-modulated tones. I systematically studied the responses of cells in
the inferior colliculus (IC) to ITDs of broadband noise, using a paradigm that
allowed disambiguation of sensitivity to fine-structure and envelope cues. The
motivation was the psychophysical observation that (1) interaction between
fine-structure and envelope cues occurs at surprisingly low frequencies
(Bernstein and Trahiotis, 1996
)
and (2) wideband high-frequency stimuli can mediate stronger effects on
laterality than the envelopes of modulated tones
(Trahiotis and Bernstein,
1986
).
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Materials and Methods
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Single-unit recordings from the IC were pooled from 18
pentobarbital-anesthetized cats, of which 17 were histologically processed to
confirm the site of recording to the central nucleus. All procedures were
approved by the University of Wisconsin Animal Care Committee and the K. U.
Leuven Ethics Committee for Animal Experiments and were in accordance with the
National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory
Animals. Anesthesia was induced with a 1:3 mixture of acepromazine and
ketamine and maintained for surgical preparation and recording with
pentobarbital. The animals were placed on a heating pad in a double-walled
sound-attenuated chamber (Industrial Acoustics Company, Niederkrüchten,
Germany). The bullae were vented with a polyethylene tube. The IC was exposed
anterior to the tentorium. Single units were isolated with glass-insulated
tungsten electrodes. Sound stimuli were delivered dichotically with dynamic
speakers (Supertweeter; Radio Shack, Fort Worth, TX) coupled to ear bars that
were tightly inserted into the cut ear canals. The stimuli were generated
digitally with custom-built (Rhode,
1976
) or commercial hardware (Tucker-Davis Technologies, Alachua,
FL) and were compensated for the acoustic transfer function measured with a
probe tube near the eardrum and a 12.7 mm condensor microphone (Brüel
& Kjær, Nærum, Denmark). The neural signal was amplified,
filtered, timed (1 µsec resolution), and displayed using standard
techniques.
Characteristic frequency (CF) (frequency of lowest threshold) was
determined with a threshold tracking algorithm to contra and/or binaural
stimulation. Pseudorandom noise bursts (lower cutoff, 100 Hz; upper cutoff
between 4 and 32 kHz, chosen to be well above CF) were presented
(duration/repetition interval x number of presentations: 1/1.5 sec
x 10 or 20, or 5/6 sec x 3) at an average suprathreshold level of
30 dB. Independently generated noise tokens (e.g., A and B) were presented in
several pairwise combinations of the original and inverted waveforms (e.g.,
A/B, A/-A, B/-B, etc.).
In three cats, these same noise stimuli (5/6 sec x 10 or 20) were
delivered monaurally while recording from the auditory nerve. Micropipettes (3
M KCl) were inserted under visual control into the nerve trunk,
exposed through a posterior fossa craniotomy. Correlograms were constructed
with bin widths of 50 µsec and normalized to the number of
permutations.
 |
Results
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Polarity-tolerant noise delay functions
When a pair of perfectly correlated, i.e., identical, broadband noise
stimuli (shorthand, A/A) is played to the two ears and ITD is systematically
varied, the firing rate of many neurons in the midbrain shows sensitivity to
ITD (Geisler et al., 1969
;
Yin et al., 1986
;
McAlpine et al., 1996
). The
noise-delay curve in Figure
1A illustrates the classical description of such
sensitivity. The firing rate shows an oscillatory dependence on ITD. This
pattern has been interpreted as the output of a coincidence detector operating
on afferent signals that have undergone bandpass filtering in the cochlea
(Yin et al., 1986
). In support
of that interpretation, presentation of anticorrelated noise pairs (A/-A) to
the two ears, obtained by inversion of the noise waveform in one ear, results
in a noise-delay curve that is still oscillatory but is inverted compared with
the response to correlated noise (Yin et
al., 1987
). Uncorrelated noise pairs (A/B) evoke a response that
is independent of ITD.

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Figure 1. IC neurons show different patterns of ITD sensitivity to noise (top
panels), and the same patterns are revealed by correlograms of auditory nerve
responses (bottom panels). Top, Noise-delay functions for three cells
illustrate the classical (A), mixed (B), and
polarity-tolerant (C) pattern. Top row, Responses to pairs of
correlated (A/A), anticorrelated (A/-A), and uncorrelated (A/B) noise. Middle
row shows the difference (DIFF) and bottom row shows the sum (SUM) of the
responses to correlated and anticorrelated noise pairs. CFs were 620 Hz
(A), 2790 Hz (B), and 3490Hz (C). The contralateral
ear leads at positive ITD values. Bottom, Correlograms of three nerve fibers
showing classical (D), mixed (E), and polarity-tolerant
(F) patterns. CFs were 405, 3200, and 5220 Hz, and spontaneous rates
were 80, 50, and 1 spikes/sec. Ordinate shows number of coincident spikes per
pair of spike trains (equivalent to 1 permutation). The number of permutations
varied with the number of presentations and was usually several hundred.
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I systematically obtained noise-delay curves to correlated and
anticorrelated noise pairs and found cells in the IC that were ITD sensitive
but with a pattern that differed strongly from the classical pattern
(Fig. 1C). In these
cells, the noise-delay function to a correlated noise pair often showed a
single peak rather than an oscillation as a function of ITD, and this pattern
did not invert in response to the anticorrelated noise pair. Because the shape
of such noise-delay functions shows little dependence on stimulus polarity, I
call them "polarity tolerant."
Many neurons showed a mixed pattern
(Fig. 1B) in which an
oscillatory component was present, which inverted with inversion of the
stimulus to one ear, as well as a polarity-tolerant component. To accentuate
these differences, Figure 1
shows the difference (row 2, DIFF) and sum (row 3, SUM) of the noise-delay
functions to correlated and anticorrelated noise. A perfect inversion with
changing stimulus polarity would result in a sum that is constant with ITD,
whereas independence of polarity would result in a constant difference: these
conditions are approached by the responses illustrated in columns A
and C, respectively. The responses in column B show both an
antiphasic oscillatory component as well as a common mound of activity.
Systematic dependence on CF
A simple explanation for polarity-tolerant behavior is envelope ITD
sensitivity because the envelope of sound waveforms is independent of their
polarity (phase shift rule; Hartmann,
1997
). Neurons in the central and peripheral auditory system are
specialized to transmit temporal features of acoustic signals in the form of
phase locking, i.e., the timing of their action potentials is synchronized to
the acoustic waveform. Besides temporal information on fine structure, present
at frequencies up to 45 kHz in the cat
(Rose et al., 1967
;
Johnson, 1980
;
Joris et al., 1994
), auditory
neurons also carry temporal information related to fluctuations in the
envelope of the acoustic waveform, as modified by cochlear filtering and
various nonlinear processes. Envelope phase locking is present at all carrier
frequencies but is transmitted with higher gain and wider bandwidth in cells
tuned to high frequencies (Palmer,
1982
; Joris and Yin,
1992
,
1998
). If polarity tolerance
reflects a cross-correlation-type operation on envelope signals, this response
pattern should predominate in neurons tuned to frequencies at which phase
locking to fine structure declines.
To obtain a simple metric for the tendency of cells to have similar or
inverted responses to correlated and anticorrelated noise pairs, the Pearson
product correlation coefficient between these responses was calculated for all
ITDs within a range of ±1000 µsec, for 171 cells. In 85 cells,
responses to A/A and A/-A showed an inverse relationship, indicating a
classical pattern as in Figure 1
A (i.e., the response to the A/A pair is high when that
to the A/-A pair is low and vice versa), and the Pearson product correlation
coefficient was significant and negative. In 49 polarity-tolerant cells, the
responses to the two conditions tended to covary, and the correlation
coefficient was significant and positive. Most of these responses showed a
single peak as in Figure
1C, but some showed a trough (n = 5) or a more
complex pattern (n = 6). Finally, in 37 cells with a mixed pattern
(Fig. 1 B), there was
no systematic relationship because of the opposing tendencies, and the
correlation coefficient was not significant.
Figure 2 A shows the
correlation coefficient as a function of the CF of the cells. Cells with the
classical form of ITD sensitivity tended to have a low CF, whereas those with
the polarity-tolerant pattern tended to have a high CF. However, both types of
ITD sensitivity were observed over a common range of CFs. Moreover, in this
common range, many cells showed the mixed pattern.

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Figure 2. Distribution of different patterns of ITD sensitivity with CF. A,
Noise-delay functions for low-frequency IC cells (< 1 kHz) invert when the
stimulus to one ear is inverted, resulting in negative correlation
coefficients between responses to A/A and A/-A noise pairs. Noise-delay
functions retain their polarity in high-frequency (>3 kHz) cells, resulting
in positive correlation coefficients. At intermediate frequencies, both types
of behavior are encountered, as well as mixed responses. Symbols indicate
significant (-) or nonsignificant ( ) product-moment correlation
coefficient (t test; p < 0.05). B, The same
analysis applied to correlograms of auditory nerve fibers shows the same trend
of inversion at low frequencies, polarity tolerance at high frequencies, and a
region of overlap and mixed patterns at midfrequencies. The solid lines
indicate the range of values from the IC (A) for comparison.
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Polarity-tolerant noise-delay functions have not been described before,
probably because previous studies of ITD sensitivity to noise focused on cells
tuned to low frequencies (Yin et al.,
1986
; McAlpine et al.,
2001
) and because the response to anticor-related noise was not
systematically collected so that the effect of fine structure versus envelope
could not be disambiguated.
A possible source of polarity-tolerant tuning is onset time difference: the
gating window is an envelope feature that is always present in the stimuli.
However, such onset differences are also present in uncorrelated noise pairs,
which did not result in ITD tuning (Fig.
1). To exclude the possibility that the ITD sensitivity in high-CF
neurons was somehow attributable to the low-frequency acoustic energy in the
stimulus, I studied 10 cells with the noise energy below CF removed. All cells
remained ITD tuned with the same polarity-tolerant pattern. Thus,
high-frequency energy is necessary and sufficient for polarity-tolerant ITD
sensitivity, which argues strongly in favor of the hypothesis that temporal
envelope patterns underlie this type of ITD sensitivity. However, an envelope
was not imposed on the broadband noise stimulus used here, so a remaining
question is the origin of the temporal patterns.
Cochlear origin of envelopes
It is well known in signal analysis that bandpass filtering of wideband
noise imposes envelope fluctuations (Fig.
3A) at a rate that reflects the bandwidth of the bandpass
filter (Rice, 1954
). Likewise,
broadband noise is bandpass filtered peripherally in the cochlea, so that the
effective stimulus transmitted to the CNS and to the binaural coincidence
detectors in the brainstem contains a temporal envelope. This envelope has not
been characterized physiologically; therefore, a method was sought to quantify
the "effective stimulus" in a way that affords straightforward
comparison with noise-delay curves.

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Figure 3. Temporal envelopes are created by bandpass filtering and can be recovered
with correlation analysis. A, Broadband noise (top trace) acquires a
well defined temporal envelope when filtered over a small passband (bottom
trace). By virtue of cochlear filtering, such temporally structured patterns
are expected to be present in the afferent signals to the binaural processor,
but they are not under direct experimental control. B, To assess the
presence and shape of these patterns, shuffled autocorrelograms were computed
from spike trains obtained in the auditory nerve. The spike trains were
collected to n repeated presentations of stimulus A (a monaural
broadband noise). All intervals between a reference spike in response to
presentation 1 (spike train 1) and all spikes in the responses to all other
presentations (spike trains 2, 3,..., n) were computed. This was
repeated using all spikes in the response to presentation 1 as reference
spike. This procedure was performed for all n spike trains.
C, Temporal patterns to different stimuli (e.g., different noise
tokens A and B) are assessed with cross-stimulus autocorrelograms. The
procedure is the same as in B, except that intervals are tallied
between spike trains to repeated presentations of different stimuli.
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Autocorrelation of spike patterns of low-CF auditory nerve fibers in
response to broadband noise reveals periodicities imposed by cochlear
filtering (Ruggero, 1973
). In
that analysis, all-order interspike intervals are compiled for each stimulus
presentation and averaged for all spike trains. The same analysis applied to
fibers tuned to high frequencies fails to reveal any temporal structure,
except a trough near zero that is attributable to the refractory period. To
avoid this trough, I calculated autocorrelation functions by tallying
intervals across spike trains (Fig.
3B): this technique of shuffling is classically used to
reveal stimulus-locked time structure in cross-correlation studies
(Perkel et al., 1967
). Thus,
in a shuffled autocorrelation function, all intervals are tallied across spike
trains to a different presentation of an identical stimulus (e.g., noise token
A). Similarly, cross-stimulus correlation functions are constructed by
tallying all intervals across spike trains evoked by different stimuli (e.g.,
to anticorrelated noise tokens A and -A or to uncorrelated tokens A and B). In
the remainder of the text, the term "correlogram" is used as a
shorthand for "correlation function."
It is important to note that the auditory nerve correlation analysis
predicts the output of the simplest conceivable coincidence detector. Each
pair of spike trains being compared can be thought of as providing left and
right input to a binaural coincidence detector, which counts spikes coincident
within a rectangular integration window (equal to the bin size used in the
correlation computation). Moreover, the inputs are exactly equal in all
properties (because they are in fact derived from the same cell). The process
of tallying interspike intervals is completely equivalent to counting
coincidences in spike trains at varying delays. Thus, correlograms provide a
natural way to compare monaural temporal properties with noise-delay functions
of real binaural cells.
Figure 1 (bottom) shows
superimposed correlograms for correlated, anticorrelated, and uncorrelated
noise tokens for three nerve fibers. The similarity of these patterns to the
classical, mixed, and polarity-tolerant patterns obtained in the IC
(Fig. 1, top) is obvious. The
distribution of these patterns as a function of CF was studied in 76 nerve
fibers using the same quantification as used on IC responses and yielded a
similar sigmoidal scatter diagram (Fig. 2
B), with inverting correlograms at low CFs,
polarity-tolerant correlograms at high CFs, and a transition region in which
both patterns as well as mixed patterns are found.
Elaboration of envelope coding between nerve and IC
Clearly, the temporal patterns in the auditory nerve provide a possible
basis for the polarity-tolerant noise-delay curves in the IC, but there are
also several differences. Compared with the IC
(Fig. 2B, solid
lines), the transition region in the auditory nerve is transposed upward in
frequency, by
1 kHz, and is less dispersed. This probably reflects the
reduced upper-frequency limit on phase locking found in second-order neurons
projecting to the binaural coincidence detectors, when compared with their
auditory nerve inputs (Joris et al.,
1994
), and possibly additional reductions in the upper limit of
phase locking at the next integration stages in the medial superior olive
(MSO) and IC. A second difference is the existence of an upper frequency limit
in the IC, but not in the nerve, to the existence of polarity-tolerant
patterns. Possibly the small representation of high frequencies in the MSO
accounts for the absence of ITD sensitivity in cells with CF >6.1 kHz.
A third difference is that polarity-tolerant patterns in the nerve appear
wider and shallower than those in the IC
(Fig. 1, compare C,
F). Two measures of tuning were obtained for all
polarity-tolerant responses (neurons with significant positive correlation in
Fig. 2) in the nerve and IC.
Response modulation, defined as (maximal response - minimal response)/(maximal
response), quantifies the degree to which the response is modulated by changes
in delay, and the width at half-height [(maximal response - minimal
response)/2] quantifies the sharpness of tuning. To remove any influence of
fine structure on these measures, they were taken from the sum of responses to
correlated and anticorrelated stimuli (compare with
Fig. 1, SUM). Correlograms in
the auditory nerve were clearly less modulated (median, 0.37; n = 65)
than IC noise-delay functions (median, 0.87; n = 41)
(MannWhitney U test; U = 99; p <<
0.001) (Fig. 4A).
Tuning width was inversely related to CF
(Fig. 4B), as expected
from the increase in the bandwidth of frequency tuning with CF
(Kiang et al., 1965
;
Evans, 1972
;
Rhode and Smith, 1985
).
Because of the shift in transition region between nerve and IC
(Fig. 2 B), there is
only a narrow region (dashed vertical lines) over which comparisons can be
made: over this region, the IC neurons are more narrowly tuned (median
half-width, 630 µsec) than the nerve (median, 970 µsec) (U =
72; p << 0.001). Thus, although the temporal patterns in the
nerve provide the basis for polarity tolerance, there is clearly an
elaboration of envelope coding and ITD sensitivity at later stages.

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Figure 4. Envelope coding is elaborated between the auditory nerve (AN) and the IC.
Delay tuning in the IC ( ) is more strongly modulated (A)and
narrower (B) than in the auditory nerve (-). Each symbol represents
one neuron. Dashed vertical lines show the region in which CFs overlap. Only
IC responses with peaked noise-delay functions were included (4 units with
"trough-type" responses excluded).
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Discussion
|
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Most psychophysical studies on human envelope ITD sensitivity use stimuli
restricted to frequencies above the range of phase locking. Such stimuli
generally result in weak lateralization, from which it is concluded that
envelope ITDs are a subordinate cue. The results presented here show that ITD
sensitivity in the IC of the cat is dominated by envelope features, generated
by bandpass filtering in the cochlea, for a large fraction of cells extending
over a wide range of CFs (16 kHz). This range includes approximately
two octaves of the "phase-locking range," which extends up to
45 kHz in the cat (Johnson,
1980
). The results suggest that internally generated envelopes
play a more important role in human lateralization than is commonly thought
but over a frequency range that differs from where it is usually sought.
The human upper limit of behavioral sensitivity to fine structure, measured
with tones, is
1.3 kHz (Zwislocki and
Feldman, 1956
), approximately one octave lower than in cats (2.8
kHz) (Jackson et al., 1996
).
Psychophysical studies of the relative weights of different sound localization
cues often assess "envelope ITD sensitivity" by restricting
stimulus energy to frequencies above the phase-locking range
(Wightman and Kistler, 1992
;
Levine et al., 1993
;
Macpherson and Middlebrooks,
2002
). Such stimuli usually indicate that the envelope ITD cue is
weak, perhaps because the neural machinery to analyze the cue in that
frequency range is limited, as suggested by the data presented here. However,
the converse procedure, of restricting stimulus energy to the phase-locking
range, does not remove envelope ITDs. Indeed, whereas the upper limit at which
humans can detect fine structure is
1.3 kHz, the transition of binaural
performance based on fine structure to that based on envelope starts at a much
lower frequency and can be modeled assuming a synchronization low-pass filter
with a cutoff frequency of
425 Hz
(Bernstein and Trahiotis,
1996
).
In conclusion, the upper limit on phase locking in the peripheral auditory
system does not coincide with the limit at which lateralization and ITD
sensitivity make a transition from being based on fine structure to being
based on envelopes. It is interesting to observe that envelope information
begins to dominate binaural performance near but below the frequency at which
ITDs based on fine structure become an ambiguous cue attributable to spatial
aliasing [
800 Hz for humans (Blauert,
1983
) and 1.4 kHz for the cat, depending on the subject's
interaural distance].
 |
Footnotes
|
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Received Apr. 3, 2003;
revised May. 13, 2003;
accepted May. 14, 2003.
This work was supported by National Institutes of Health/National Institute
on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grant DC00116, Fund for
Scientific Research (Flanders) Grants G.0297.98 and G.0083.02, and Research
Fund Katholieke Universiteit Leuven Grant OT/01/42. Thanks to B. Delgutte, A.
Recio, D. Tollin, M. van der Heijden, and T. C. T. Yin for comments and to T.
C. T. Yin and Yin-Inn for support.
Correspondence should be addressed to Philip X. Joris, Laboratory of
Auditory Neurophysiology, Campus Gasthuisberg O&N, K. U. Leuven, B-3000
Leuven, Belgium. E-mail:
philip.joris{at}med.kuleuven.ac.be.
Copyright © 2003 Society for Neuroscience
0270-6474/03/236345-06$15.00/0
 |
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