| Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 7295631 | International Journal of Psychophysiology | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The auditory system is designed to transform acoustic information from low-level sensory representations into perceptual representations. These perceptual representations are the computational result of the auditory system's ability to group and segregate spectral, spatial and temporal regularities in the acoustic environment into stable perceptual units (i.e., sounds or auditory objects). Current evidence suggests that the cortex-specifically, the ventral auditory pathway-is responsible for the computations most closely related to perceptual representations. Here, we discuss how the transformations along the ventral auditory pathway relate to auditory percepts, with special attention paid to the processing of vocalizations and categorization, and explore recent models of how these areas may carry out these computations.
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Authors
Kate L. Christison-Lagay, Adam M. Gifford, Yale E. Cohen,
