Listeners can perceive interleaved sequences of sounds from two or more sources as segregated streams. In humans, physical separation of sound sources is a major factor enabling such stream segregation. Here, we examine spatial stream segregation with a psychophysical measure in domestic cats. Cats depressed a pedal to initiate a target sequence of brief sound bursts in a particular rhythm and then released the pedal when the rhythm changed. The target bursts were interleaved with a competing sequence of bursts that could differ in source location but otherwise were identical to the target bursts. This task was possible only when the sources were heard as segregated streams. When the sound bursts had broad spectra, cats could detect the rhy...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Listeners can perceive interleaved sequences of sounds from two or more sources as segregated stream...
Listeners have the remarkable ability to disentangle multiple competing sound sequences and organize...
Listeners have a remarkable ability to perceptually segregate interleaved sequences of sounds in com...
We live in complex auditory environments, in which we are confronted with multiple competing sounds,...
In a complex auditory scene, a "cocktail party" for example, listeners can disentangle multiple comp...
Stream segregation enables a listener to disentangle multiple competing sequences of sounds. A recen...
Stream segregation enables a listener to disentangle multiple competing sequences of sounds. A recen...
The auditory cortex is known to be essential for normal sound localization behavior, yet we lack a c...
Assemblies of vertically connected neurons in the cerebral cortex form information processing units ...
Auditory cortex is essential for normal sound localization behavior. Reversible inactivation of prim...
Auditory cortex is essential for normal sound localization behavior. Reversible inactivation of prim...
Assemblies of vertically connected neurons in the cerebral cortex form information processing units ...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Listeners can perceive interleaved sequences of sounds from two or more sources as segregated stream...
Listeners have the remarkable ability to disentangle multiple competing sound sequences and organize...
Listeners have a remarkable ability to perceptually segregate interleaved sequences of sounds in com...
We live in complex auditory environments, in which we are confronted with multiple competing sounds,...
In a complex auditory scene, a "cocktail party" for example, listeners can disentangle multiple comp...
Stream segregation enables a listener to disentangle multiple competing sequences of sounds. A recen...
Stream segregation enables a listener to disentangle multiple competing sequences of sounds. A recen...
The auditory cortex is known to be essential for normal sound localization behavior, yet we lack a c...
Assemblies of vertically connected neurons in the cerebral cortex form information processing units ...
Auditory cortex is essential for normal sound localization behavior. Reversible inactivation of prim...
Auditory cortex is essential for normal sound localization behavior. Reversible inactivation of prim...
Assemblies of vertically connected neurons in the cerebral cortex form information processing units ...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...
Activity in the primary auditory cortex (A1) is essential for normal sound localization behavior, bu...