Speech coding in the auditory nerve: I. Vowel-like sounds
- 1 March 1984
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Acoustical Society of America (ASA) in The Journal of the Acoustical Society of America
- Vol. 75 (3) , 866-878
- https://doi.org/10.1121/1.390596
Abstract
Discharge patterns of auditory-nerve in anesthetized cats were recorded in response to a set of 9 steady-state, 2-formant vowels presented at 60 and 75 dB SPL [sound pressure level]. The largest components in the discrete Fourier transforms of period histograms were almost always harmonics of the vowel fundamental frequency that were close to 1 of the formant frequencies, the fundamental frequency or the fiber characteristic frequency (CF). For any fiber, the position of its CF relative to the formant frequencies (F1 and F2) appears to determine which of these components dominates the response. Specifically, the response characteristics of the tonotopically arranged array of fibers can be described in terms of 5 CF regions: a low-CF region below F1 in which the largest response components are the harmonics of the fundamental frequency closest to CF; a region centered around CF = F1 in which the first formant and its harmonics are the largest components; an intermediate region between F1 and F2 with prominent components at both the fiber CF and the fundamental frequency; a region centered around CF = F2 in which harmonics close to the 2nd formant are the largest for frequencies above the fundamental; and a high-CF region in which response spectra tend to show broad, multiple peaks at the formant and fundamental frequencies. These CF regions are related to the phonetic descriptions of vowels. For example, the extent of the low-CF region is largest for open vowels (which have a high F1), and the intermediate region is distinct only for spread vowels for which F1 and F2 are more than 1.5 to 2 octaves apart. For all vowels, response activity for the majority of fibers is concentrated near the formant frequencies, in contrast to responses to broadband noise for which components near CF are dominant. [Results are discussed in terms of human speech processing.].This publication has 19 references indexed in Scilit:
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