Listening in complex acoustic scenes
Autor: | Andrew J. King, Kerry M. M. Walker |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
0301 basic medicine
Sound (medical instrument) Auditory scene analysis Physiology Computer science Speech recognition Article Key (music) Background noise 03 medical and health sciences Noise 030104 developmental biology 0302 clinical medicine medicine.anatomical_structure Physiology (medical) medicine Auditory system Active listening 030217 neurology & neurosurgery Coding (social sciences) |
Zdroj: | Current opinion in physiology |
ISSN: | 2468-8673 |
Popis: | Being able to pick out particular sounds, such as speech, against a background of other sounds represents one of the key tasks performed by the auditory system. Understanding how this happens is important because speech recognition in noise is particularly challenging for older listeners and for people with hearing impairments. Central to this ability is the capacity of neurons to adapt to the statistics of sounds reaching the ears, which helps to generate noise-tolerant representations of sounds in the brain. In more complex auditory scenes, such as a cocktail party — where the background noise comprises other voices, sound features associated with each source have to be grouped together and segregated from those belonging to other sources. This depends on precise temporal coding and modulation of cortical response properties when attending to a particular speaker in a multi-talker environment. Furthermore, the neural processing underlying auditory scene analysis is shaped by experience over multiple timescales. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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