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Responses of "lower-spontaneous-rate" auditory-nerve fibers to speech syllables presented in noise. II: Glottal-pulse periodicities.
Authors:C D Geisler  S M Silkes
Affiliation:Department of Neurophysiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison 53706.
Abstract:The responses of single cat auditory-nerve fibers to naturally spoken voiced sounds (the vowels [a, i, u] and the murmur [m]) presented at normal intensity (70 dB SPL) in various levels of speech-shaped noise were analyzed for the encoding of the glottal-pulse (fundamental) period. To quantify the strength of this fundamental-period encoding, selected segments of the response histograms were autocorrelated, rectified, and fitted with the best-fitting sinusoid of the fundamental frequency. The magnitude of this best-fitting sinusoid was taken as the magnitude of synchronization. In most cases, it was found that the "lower-SR" fibers (those with spontaneous discharge rates less than 20/s) encoded the fundamental periodicity more strongly and more robustly than did the "high-SR" fibers (those with spontaneous discharge rates greater than 20/s). When either a single strong spectral peak or a relatively "flat" spectrum excited a fiber, it showed poor synchronization to the fundamental period, regardless of its spontaneous-rate class. Judging from a few examples, the glottal-pulse synchronization appears to be intensity dependent, with the relative performance of the high-SR fibers improving at lower intensities. A conceptual model is given which accounts for the general characteristics of the data.
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