Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4321725 Neuron 2010 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryIn the precedence effect, sounds emanating directly from the source are localized preferentially over their reflections. Although most studies have focused on the delay between the onset of a sound and its echo, humans still experience the precedence effect when this onset delay is removed. We tested in barn owls the hypothesis that an ongoing delay, equivalent to the onset delay, is discernible from the envelope features of amplitude-modulated stimuli and may be sufficient to evoke this effect. With sound pairs having only envelope cues, owls localized direct sounds preferentially, and neurons in their auditory space-maps discharged more vigorously to them, but only if the sounds were amplitude modulated. Under conditions that yielded the precedence effect, acoustical features known to evoke neuronal discharges were more abundant in the envelopes of the direct sounds than of the echoes, suggesting that specialized neural mechanisms for echo suppression were unnecessary.

► The precedence effect in owls requires envelope modulations ► Neural correlate of the precedence effect requires envelope modulations ► Preferences for binaural cues and modulations can explain the precedence effect ► No evidence for the suppression of directional information of echoes

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