Title: 12: Audition
112 Audition
- Chris Rorden
- Deb Hall, MRC Institute of Hearing Research
- Anatomy and function of the auditory system
- Brainstem disorders
- Word deafness
- Amusia
- Environmental sound agnosia
- Auditory neglect and extinction
www.mricro.com
2Anatomy and function source Ashmore, 2002
- The ear is a complex
- physiological apparatus,
- not just the visible
- outer ear
- - Reflection of sound in pinna provides spectral
cues about elevation of a sound source - - Middle ear is a cavity containing an ossicular
lever which matches the acoustical impedance of
the inner ear so sound energy is effectively
transmitted (60) - - Inner ear contains the cochlea where sound is
converted into a neural signal - - Sound energy is separated into frequencies
(low energies at tip)
3Ear structures
- Peripheral
- Outer ear
- Middle ear
- Inner ear
- Auditory nerve
- Central
- Brainstem
- Midbrain
- Cerebral
4Outer Ear - Pinna
Pinna the projecting part of the ear lying
outside of the head (also called
auricle) Reflection of sound in pinna provides
spectral cues about elevation of a sound source
5Outer Ear Auditory Canal
- External auditory meatus
- Provides communication between middle and inner
ears by conducting sound to the ear drum - S-shaped tube _at_ 2.5cm long and _at_ 7mm wide
- Lining of the lateral 1/3rd of canal has cilia
and glands - Cerumen protects ear canal from drying out and
prevents intrusion of insects
6Outer Ear - Ear drum
- Tympanic membrane
- Separates outer and middle ear
- Compliant
- Thin, three-layered sheet
- Epithelium of EAM outer layer
- Middle layer fibrous (strong) tissue
- Inner layer of middle ear mucous membrane
7Outer Ear - Ear drum
- Slightly concave to EAM, cone-shaped
- Most depressed and thinnest point is called the
umbo cone of light (_at_ 2 mm) - End of the attachment of malleus
- Slightly oval, taller than wide
- Otoscope if you pull the pinna up and back the
tympanic membrane is visible
8Role of outer ear
- To augment the sound shadow
- Ear canal protects delicate parts of middle and
inner ear from impact. - To heighten our sensitivity to sounds
- Ear canal boosts sounds 15 to 16 dB between 1.5
and 8 kHz (in the area of speech) - This is due to resonance of ear canal
- Just like vocal tract this tube amplifies and
dampens certain frequencies based on its length
and composition
9Localization and shadowing
- Intensity differences louder if nearer, less
shaded - Inter-aural timing differences
- Frequencies influenced by location relative to
pinna.
10Middle Ear Tympanic Membrane
11Middle Ear Eustachian Tube
- Establishes communication between middle ear and
nasopharynx - 35 to 38 mm long, typically closed
- Biological functions
- To permit middle ear pressure to equalize with
external air pressure - On the air plane, change in atmospheric pressure
but not pressure in middle ear - Yawning or swallowing opens pharyngeal orifice of
tube to equalize pressures - To permit drainage of normal and diseased middle
ear secretions into the nasopharynx
12Middle Ear - Ossicles
- 3 of the smallest bones
- Malleus (hammer)
- Incus (anvil)
- Stapes (stirrup)
- Ossicular chain Transmits acoustic energy from
tympanic membrane to inner ear - Delivers sound vibrations to inner ear fluid
- Prevents the inner ear from being overwhelmed by
excessively strong vibrations
13Middle Ear Ossicles
14Middle Ear Ossicles - Incus
- The ossicles give the eardrum mechanical
advantage via lever action and a reduction in the
area of force distribution - Pressure Force/Area so less area more
pressure - the resulting vibrations would be much smaller if
the sound waves were transmitted directly from
the outer ear to the oval window. - The movements of the ossicles is controlled
muscles attached to them (the tensor tympani and
the stapedius).These muscles can dampen the
vibration of the ossicles, in order to protect
the inner ear from excessively loud noise and
that they give better frequency resolution at
higher frequencies by reducing the transmission
of low frequencies
15Cochlea and neighbors
16Tonotopic
17Travelling wave
- Always starts at the base of the cochlea and
moves toward the apex - Its amplitude changes as it traverses the length
of the cochlea - The position along the basilar membrane atwhich
its amplitude is highest depends on the frequency
of the stimulus
18Traveling wave
- High frequencies have peak influence near base
and stapes - Low frequencies travel further, have peak near
apex - A short movie
- www.neurophys.wisc.edu/ychen/auditory/animation/a
nimationmain.html
- Green line shows 'envelope' of travelling wave
at this frequency most oscillation occurs 28mm
from stapes.
19Anatomy and function source Hackney, 2002
- Many sound features are encoded before the signal
reaches the cortex -
- Cochlear nucleus segregates sound information
- Signals from each ear converge on the superior
olivary complex - important for sound
localization - Inferior colliculus is sensitive to location,
absolute intensity, rates of intensity change,
frequency - important for pattern categorization - Descending cortical influences modify the input
from the medial geniculate nucleus - important as
an adaptive filter
cortex
medial geniculate body
inferior colliculus
cochlear nucleus complex
cochlea
superior olivary complex
20Anatomy source Palmer Hall, 2002
Right hemisphere
- Primary non-primary auditory cortex
-
Sylvian Fissure
Medial Temporal Gyrus
planum polare (nonprimary AC)
Superior Temporal Gyrus
Superior Temporal Sulcus
planum temporale (nonprimary AC)
21Function source Palmer Hall, 2002
Intensity
Fast-rate temporal pattern in sound
- Numerous bilateral regions are
frequency-dependent - Overlapping regions are sensitive to intensity
and to the temporal changes in sound - One region is sensitive to the spatial
properties of sound (RgtL) - Speech also activates these regions, but neurons
are probably responding to the complex acoustic
properties in the sound. - Perceptual attributes may be important
Right hemisphere
Slow-rate temporal pattern in sound
22(No Transcript)
23- Sound intensity and activation
- Loud sounds (90 dB) activated posterior and
medial temporal gyrus (red) - Soft (70 dB) sounds activated area (yellow) is
found most laterally of TTG - Medium intensity (82 dB) sounds activated
intermediate area (green). (NeuroImage 200217
710)
24Auditory neuropsychology
- Simple modularity of function not clearly
apparent - - No auditory equivalents of V4 (visual colour
area), V5 (visual motion area), fusiform face
area etc - - Cortical neurons respond to a complex array of
stimulus features, and the temporal pattern of
those features is important - Unlike visual or somatomotor systems
- - A lot of auditory processing is supported by
the ascending pathway - - Studies in several mammalian species have
demonstrated that bilateral ablations of the
auditory cortex have little effect on simple
sound intensity and frequency-based behaviours
25Brainstem disorders
Where is the lesion?
A
D
C
B
26Brainstem disorders source Griffiths et al. 1999
- Brainstem cochlear nucleus, superior olivary
complex, inferior colliculus - Lesions rarely compatible with life
- Multiple sclerosis can affect brainstem
- - Complete deafness is rare
- - MS patients do not report problems in everyday
sound perception - - Few systematic studies
- - Deficit in perceiving frequency changes
- - Deficit in detecting a gap in noise
- - Deficit in processing binaural cues for sound
localisation -
27Auditory agnosia
Perception
Recognition
Acoustical analysis
Representations
Auditory input
Apperceptive agnosia
Associative agnosia
Auditory agnosia is of this type
28Auditory agnosia source Griffiths et al. 1999
- Normal brainstem processing
- Midbrain impairment questionable
- Cortical deficit in perception
- - Preserved hearing (pure tones)
- - Disordered perception of certain sounds
- Speech - word deafness
- Music - amusia
- Environmental sounds - environmental sound
agnosia
29A case of word deafness source Ellis Young,
1988
- Hemphill and Stengel (1940)
- I can hear you dead plain, but I cannot get
what you say. The noises are not quite natural. I
can hear but not understand - - Normal pure tone audiometry
- - Fluent speech no errors of grammar beyond
what is common for his particular dialect and
standard of education - - Normal reading
- - Normal writing and spelling
- - Poor spoken word repetition
- - Gross asymmetry between spoken and written
word comprehension
30Word deafness source Ellis Young, 1988
- Associated symptoms
- - Some hearing loss (gt 20 dB HL)
- - Production (Brocas) aphasia
- - Perception of melody
- - Perception of environmental sounds
- Lesion site
- - Generally large bilateral infarcts
- - When unilateral, its more often the left
hemisphere - - Involves superior temporal lobe (non-primary
auditory cortex) - - May or may not involve Heschls gyrus (primary
auditory cortex)
31Word deafness
8
Frequency (kHz)
0
Time
- filtered harmonic sounds, broad band noise,
silent gaps - transitions in amplitude and
frequency on three time scales (milliseconds, 10s
of milliseconds, seconds) These temporal
transitions are rapid and complex
32Word deafness source Ellis Young, 1988
- Inability to make fine temporal discriminations
and track rapidly-changing acoustic signals? - There may be nothing speech specific about the
impairment Ellis Young, 1988 -
33A case of amusia source Peretz, 1993
- Patient CN
-
- Symptoms
- - Unable to recognise even simplest tune
- - Unable to sing childrens songs that she had
known well - - No deficit in everyday verbal communication
- - No deficit in everyday recognition of
environmental sounds - Lesion site
- - Bilateral temporal lobe damage
- - When unilateral, its more often the right
hemisphere
34Amusia source Peretz, 1993
- Dissociation within musical perception
- - Deficit in melody perception the variations
in pitch - - Deficit in rhythm perception the temporal
organisation of melody over 100s of milliseconds
or seconds time scale
35Amusia
Frequency
Time
- As in speech, music contains discrete harmonic
sounds that vary over time - melody local variation in features from note to
note - rhythm global variations in note duration that
relate to a higher order pattern -
36Environmental sound agnosia
source Griffiths et al. 1999
- Deficit rarely occurs in isolation
Environmental sounds contain fewer changes in
acoustic structure over time than an equivalent
length segment of speech or music
37A common deficit? No! source Peretz, 1993
- Word deafness, amusia and environmental sound
agnosia are distinct - - speech and music can dissociate after brain
damage - - music and environmental sounds can dissociate
after brain damage - - environmental sound perception can be
selectively spared - - recovery can follow different patterns (e.g.
environmental sounds, then music then speech or
in the reverse order)
38A common deficit? Yes! source Griffiths et al.
1999
- Word deafness, amusia and environmental sound
agnosia probably co-occur - - May not always be report because not all
abilities are tested - All 3 types of sound contain a mixture of
acoustic features - Deficit in an intermediate level of analysis,
which is rarely tested - - Analysing the spectro-temporal pattern in
sound -
39Auditory neglect source Pavani et al., 2003
Symptoms (a) Rightward biases in sound
localization (b) Poor relative judgements for
sounds on the contralesional side (c) Poor
elevation judgements for sounds on the
contralesional side Failure to detect
contralesional sound, when presented
concurrently Poor allocation of attention to
sounds separated in time
40Auditory neglect source Pavani et al., 2003
Lesion site - right inferior parietal lobe -
superior temporal gyrus - temporo-parietal
junction
41Auditory visual neglect A common deficit?
Yes! source Pavani et al. 2003
- Many neglect patients exhibit auditory, as well
as visual, deficits. -
- Correlation between severity of clinical visual
neglect and experimental auditory neglect
measures. - Neglect can often be caused by damage to brain
regions containing multisensory representations
of space, with the deficit consequently
manifesting across multiple sensory modalities,
with correlated severity. -
visual deficit
auditory deficit
42Visual extinction source Rorden et al., 1997
Symptom - a chronic bias of spatial attention
towards the ipsilesional side Hence,
ipsilesional events are perceived earlier than
physically synchronous contralesional stimuli.
This can be measured using the temporal order
judgements test.
43Visual extinction source Karnath et al., 2002
The same deficit is also found in audition
and over the same time scale ( 200
ms)
44Auditory visual extinction A common deficit?
Possibly! source Karnath et al. 2002
- Visual and auditory extinction have not been
studied in the same patients -
- ...but delay is of the same time scale
- It seems that the costs for information
processing of contralesional events in
extinction, induced by the bias of spatial
attention towards the ipsilesional side, affect
awareness of visual as well as auditory events to
a similar degree. -
45Science 2002 297 1706
46Key references
- (1) Signals and Perception 2002
- Ch1 The mechanisms of hearing by Ashmore
- Ch3 From cochlea to cortex by Hackney
- Ch4 Imaging central auditory function by Palmer
Hall - (2) Griffiths et al., Disorders of human complex
sound processing Neurocase 5 365-378, 1999 - (3) Human Cognitive Neuropsychology by Ellis
Young 1988 - Ch6 Recognising and understanding spoken words
- (4) Thinking in sound The cognitive psychology
of human audition Editors McAdams Bigand 1993 - Ch7 Auditory agnosia A functional analysis by
Peretz - (5) Pavani et al., Auditory and multisensory
aspects of visuospatial neglect. Trends in
Cognitive Sciences 7407-414, 2003 - (6) Karnath et al., Impaired perception of
temporal order in auditory extinction.
Neuropsychologia 40 1977-1982 2002 -
47Additional references
- (7) Review of functional organisation of the
auditory cortex - Hall et al., Relationships between human
auditory cortical structure and function.
Audiology and Neuro-otology 8 1-18, 2003 - (8) Case studies of auditory agnosia
- References to many original papers can be found
in (2) Griffiths et al., Disorders of human
complex sound processing Neurocase 5 365-378,
1999 - (9) A case of non-spatial auditory neglect
- Cusack et al., Neglect between but not within
auditory objectsJournal of Cognitive
Neuroscience 12 1056-1065 2000 - (10) Temporal order judgement deficits in visual
neglect - Rorden et al., Visual extinction and prior
entry impaired perception of temporal order with
intact motion perception after unilateral
parietal damage. Neuropsychologia 35 421-433
1997 -