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Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex

It is well known that damage to the peripheral auditory system causes deficits in tone detection as well as pitch and loudness perception across a wide range of frequencies. However, the extent to which to which the auditory cortex plays a critical role in these basic aspects of spectral processing,...

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Autores principales: Dykstra, Andrew R., Koh, Christine K., Braida, Louis D., Tramo, Mark Jude
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3434164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22957087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044602
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author Dykstra, Andrew R.
Koh, Christine K.
Braida, Louis D.
Tramo, Mark Jude
author_facet Dykstra, Andrew R.
Koh, Christine K.
Braida, Louis D.
Tramo, Mark Jude
author_sort Dykstra, Andrew R.
collection PubMed
description It is well known that damage to the peripheral auditory system causes deficits in tone detection as well as pitch and loudness perception across a wide range of frequencies. However, the extent to which to which the auditory cortex plays a critical role in these basic aspects of spectral processing, especially with regard to speech, music, and environmental sound perception, remains unclear. Recent experiments indicate that primary auditory cortex is necessary for the normally-high perceptual acuity exhibited by humans in pure-tone frequency discrimination. The present study assessed whether the auditory cortex plays a similar role in the intensity domain and contrasted its contribution to sensory versus discriminative aspects of intensity processing. We measured intensity thresholds for pure-tone detection and pure-tone loudness discrimination in a population of healthy adults and a middle-aged man with complete or near-complete lesions of the auditory cortex bilaterally. Detection thresholds in his left and right ears were 16 and 7 dB HL, respectively, within clinically-defined normal limits. In contrast, the intensity threshold for monaural loudness discrimination at 1 kHz was 6.5±2.1 dB in the left ear and 6.5±1.9 dB in the right ear at 40 dB sensation level, well above the means of the control population (left ear: 1.6±0.22 dB; right ear: 1.7±0.19 dB). The results indicate that auditory cortex lowers just-noticeable differences for loudness discrimination by approximately 5 dB but is not necessary for tone detection in quiet. Previous human and Old-world monkey experiments employing lesion-effect, neurophysiology, and neuroimaging methods to investigate the role of auditory cortex in intensity processing are reviewed.
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spelling pubmed-34341642012-09-06 Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex Dykstra, Andrew R. Koh, Christine K. Braida, Louis D. Tramo, Mark Jude PLoS One Research Article It is well known that damage to the peripheral auditory system causes deficits in tone detection as well as pitch and loudness perception across a wide range of frequencies. However, the extent to which to which the auditory cortex plays a critical role in these basic aspects of spectral processing, especially with regard to speech, music, and environmental sound perception, remains unclear. Recent experiments indicate that primary auditory cortex is necessary for the normally-high perceptual acuity exhibited by humans in pure-tone frequency discrimination. The present study assessed whether the auditory cortex plays a similar role in the intensity domain and contrasted its contribution to sensory versus discriminative aspects of intensity processing. We measured intensity thresholds for pure-tone detection and pure-tone loudness discrimination in a population of healthy adults and a middle-aged man with complete or near-complete lesions of the auditory cortex bilaterally. Detection thresholds in his left and right ears were 16 and 7 dB HL, respectively, within clinically-defined normal limits. In contrast, the intensity threshold for monaural loudness discrimination at 1 kHz was 6.5±2.1 dB in the left ear and 6.5±1.9 dB in the right ear at 40 dB sensation level, well above the means of the control population (left ear: 1.6±0.22 dB; right ear: 1.7±0.19 dB). The results indicate that auditory cortex lowers just-noticeable differences for loudness discrimination by approximately 5 dB but is not necessary for tone detection in quiet. Previous human and Old-world monkey experiments employing lesion-effect, neurophysiology, and neuroimaging methods to investigate the role of auditory cortex in intensity processing are reviewed. Public Library of Science 2012-09-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3434164/ /pubmed/22957087 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044602 Text en © 2012 Dykstra et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dykstra, Andrew R.
Koh, Christine K.
Braida, Louis D.
Tramo, Mark Jude
Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title_full Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title_fullStr Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title_full_unstemmed Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title_short Dissociation of Detection and Discrimination of Pure Tones following Bilateral Lesions of Auditory Cortex
title_sort dissociation of detection and discrimination of pure tones following bilateral lesions of auditory cortex
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3434164/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22957087
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0044602
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