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Correct tonotopic representation is necessary for complex pitch perception

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TLDR
It is found that human subjects displayed poor pitch perception for single tones and none of the subjects was able to extract the fundamental frequency from multiple low-frequency harmonics presented to high-frequency regions of the cochlea.
Abstract
The ability to extract a pitch from complex harmonic sounds, such as human speech, animal vocalizations, and musical instruments, is a fundamental attribute of hearing. Some theories of pitch rely on the frequency-to-place mapping, or tonotopy, in the inner ear (cochlea), but most current models are based solely on the relative timing of spikes in the auditory nerve. So far, it has proved to be difficult to distinguish between these two possible representations, primarily because temporal and place information usually covary in the cochlea. In this study, “transposed stimuli” were used to dissociate temporal from place information. By presenting the temporal information of low-frequency sinusoids to locations in the cochlea tuned to high frequencies, we found that human subjects displayed poor pitch perception for single tones. More importantly, none of the subjects was able to extract the fundamental frequency from multiple low-frequency harmonics presented to high-frequency regions of the cochlea. The experiments demonstrate that tonotopic representation is crucial to complex pitch perception and provide a new tool in the search for the neural basis of pitch.

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Cochlear implants: a remarkable past and a brilliant future

TL;DR: The aims of this paper are to provide a brief history of cochlear implants, present a status report on the current state of implant engineering and the levels of speech understanding enabled by that engineering, describe limitations of current signal processing strategies, and suggest new directions for research.
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The role of temporal fine structure processing in pitch perception, masking, and speech perception for normal-hearing and hearing-impaired people.

TL;DR: The role played by TFS in masking, pitch perception, and speech perception is reviewed and it is concluded that cues derived from TFS play an important role for all three.
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Trends in Cochlear Implants

TL;DR: A future landscape in amplification is presented that requires a unique, yet complementary, contribution from hearing aids, middle ear implants, and cochlear implants to achieve a total solution to the entire spectrum of hearing loss treatment and management.
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A Neural Representation of Pitch Salience in Nonprimary Human Auditory Cortex Revealed with Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

TL;DR: Functional magnetic resonance imaging was used to measure activation in response to harmonic tone complexes whose temporal regularity was identical, but whose pitch salience differed, across conditions, contributing to converging evidence that anterior areas of nonprimary auditory cortex play an important role in processing pitch.
Journal ArticleDOI

Melodic Contour Identification by Cochlear Implant Listeners

TL;DR: Improvement in MCI performance and generalization to FMI performance with training suggests that MCI training may be useful for improving cochlear implant users' music perception and appreciation; such training may also be necessary to properly evaluate patient performance.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Speech recognition with primarily temporal cues.

TL;DR: Nearly perfect speech recognition was observed under conditions of greatly reduced spectral information; the presentation of a dynamic temporal pattern in only a few broad spectral regions is sufficient for the recognition of speech.
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Introduction to the Psychology of Hearing

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide an account of current trends in auditory research on a level not too technical for the novice, by relating psychological and perceptual aspects of sound to the underlying physiological mechanisms of hearing in a way that the material can be used as a text to accompany an advanced undergraduate or graduate level course in auditory perception.
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Chimaeric sounds reveal dichotomies in auditory perception

TL;DR: This work synthesized stimuli that they call ‘auditory chimaeras’, which have the envelope of one sound and the fine structure of another, and shows that the envelope is most important for speech reception, and thefine structure is mostImportant for pitch perception and sound localization.
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