Behavioral and physiological correlates of temporal pitch perception in electric and acoustic hearing

J Acoust Soc Am. 2008 Feb;123(2):973-85. doi: 10.1121/1.2821986.

Abstract

In the "4-6" condition of experiment 1, normal-hearing (NH) listeners compared the pitch of a bandpass-filtered pulse train, whose inter-pulse intervals (IPIs) alternated between 4 and 6 ms, to that of isochronous pulse trains. Consistent with previous results obtained at a lower signal level, the pitch of the 4-6 stimulus corresponded to that of an isochronous pulse train having a period of 5.7 ms-longer than the mean IPI of 5 ms. In other conditions the IPI alternated between 3.5-5.5 and 4.5-6.5 ms. Experiment 2 was similar but presented electric pulse trains to one channel of a cochlear implant. In both cases, as overall IPI increased, the pitch of the alternating-interval stimulus approached that of an isochronous train having a period equal to the mean IPI. Experiment 3 measured compound action potentials (CAPs) to alternating-interval stimuli in guinea pigs and in NH listeners. The CAPs to pulses occurring after 4-ms intervals were smaller than responses to pulses occurring after 6-ms intervals, resulting in a modulated pattern that was independent of overall level. The results are compared to the predictions of a simple model incorporating auditory-nerve (AN) refractoriness, and where pitch is estimated from first-order intervals in the AN response.

Publication types

  • Comparative Study

MeSH terms

  • Acoustic Stimulation / psychology*
  • Action Potentials
  • Animals
  • Cochlear Implants*
  • Cochlear Nerve / physiology*
  • Cues
  • Guinea Pigs
  • Humans
  • Models, Neurological*
  • Pitch Discrimination / physiology*
  • Psychoacoustics*
  • Refractory Period, Electrophysiological