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  • Title: Complex tone processing and critical band in the human auditory cortex.
    Author: Soeta Y, Nakagawa S.
    Journal: Hear Res; 2006 Dec; 222(1-2):125-32. PubMed ID: 17081712.
    Abstract:
    Psychophysical experiments in humans have indicated that the auditory system has a well-defined bandwidth for resolution of complex stimuli. This bandwidth is known as the critical bandwidth (CBW). Physiological correlates of the CBW were examined in the human auditory cortex. Two- and three-tone complexes were used as the sound stimuli with all signals presented at 55 dB sound pressure level (SPL). The duration of stimulation was 500 ms, with rise and fall ramps of 10 ms. Ten normal-hearing subjects took part in the study. Auditory-evoked fields were recorded using a 122-channel whole-head magnetometer in a magnetically shielded room. The latencies, source strengths, and coordinates of the N1m waves, which were found above the left and right temporal lobes approximately 100 ms after the onset of stimulation, were analyzed. The results indicated that N1m amplitudes were approximately constant when the frequency separation of a two-tone complex or the total bandwidth of a three-tone complex was less than the CBW; however, the N1m amplitudes increased with increasing frequency separation or total bandwidth when these were greater than the CBW. These findings indicate critical band-like behavior in the human auditory cortex. The N1m amplitudes in the right hemisphere were significantly greater than those in the left hemisphere, which may reflect a right-hemispheric dominance in the processing of tonal stimuli.
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