The auditory periphery of the ferret: Postnatal development of acoustic properties
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Development of the head, pinnae, and acoustical cues to sound location in a precocial species, the guinea pig (Cavia porcellus)
2017, Hearing ResearchCitation Excerpt :Presumably, the neural representation of sound source location needs to remain plastic to accommodate the maturation of the acoustic cues to location. Such plasticity has been suggested by studies in the ferret where the time course of the growth of the head and pinna correlates with the duration of a āsensitive periodā of auditory development (Carlile, 1991; Schnupp et al., 1998). Withington-Wray et al. (1990) also found that cells in the guinea pig superior colliculus, a multisensory midbrain nucleus, are broadly tuned to sound location at birth and improve spatial tuning with age.
Localization training results in individuals with unilateral severe toprofound hearing loss
2015, Hearing ResearchCitation Excerpt :As children grow and develop, their sound localization adjusts to the modified binaural and spectral cues that result from head (Clifton et al., 1988; Ashmead et al., 1991) and ear size (Niemitz et al., 2007; Otte et al., 2013). Furthermore, animal studies have shown that the localization mechanism adjusts to modified spectral cues known as head-related transfer functions, which are based on the spatial relationships between the head, ears and body/torso, relationships that change with growth and development (Carlile, 1991; Campbell et al., 2008). Adaptive changes can also be derived artificially.
Early Development of the Human Auditory System
2011, Fetal and Neonatal Physiology E-Book, Fourth EditionSpectral Information in Sound Localization
2005, International Review of NeurobiologyCitation Excerpt :The HRTFs of the guinea pig have been measured both acoustically (Dickson et al., 2002, 2003; Sinyor and Laszlo, 1973) and estimated using the directional changes in the cochlear microphonic (Carlile and Pettigrew, 1987; Palmer and King, 1985). The acoustics of the auditory periphery of the ferret have also been studied extensively (Carlile, 1990a,b, 1991; Schnupp et al., 2003). In terms of the overall spectral patterns and their location dependence, the HRTFs of both species are not unlike the human HRTF, albeit at a higher frequency.
Early Development of the Human Auditory System
2003, Fetal and Neonatal Physiology: Third EditionSound localization in chinchillas III: Effect of pinna removal
1996, Hearing Research