The result of extensive collaboration among leaders of the worldwide auditory research community, Auditory Signal Processing: Physiology, Psychoacoustics, and Models is a record of the papersΒ presented at the XIIIth International Symposium on Hearing (ISH) Dourdan, France, August 24-29, 2003. The vo
Auditory System: Physiology (CNS)Β· Behavioral Studies Psychoacoustics
β Scribed by Moshe Abeles, GΓran Bredberg, Robert A. Butler, John H. Casseday, John E. Desmedt, Irving T. Diamond, Solomon D. Erulkar, E. F. Evans, Jay M. Goldberg, Moise H. Goldstein Jr., David M. Green, Ivan M. Hunter-Duvar, Lloyd A. Jeffress, William D. Neff, William A. Yost, E. Zwicker (auth.), Wolf D. Keidel, William D. Neff (eds.)
- Publisher
- Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg
- Year
- 1975
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 532
- Series
- Handbook of Sensory Physiology 5 / 2 : Auditory System
- Edition
- 1
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
nerve; subsequently, however, they concluded that the recordings had been from aberrant cells of the cochlear nucleus lying central to the glial margin of the VIII nerve (GALAMBOS and DAVIS, 1948). The first successful recordmgs from fibres of the cochlear nerve were made by TASAKI (1954) in the guinea pig. These classical but necessarily limited results were greatly extended by ROSE, GALAMBOS, and HUGHES (1959) in the cat cochlear nucleus and by KATSUKI and co-workers (KATSUKI et at. , 1958, 1961, 1962) in the cat and monkey cochlear nerve. Perhaps the most significant developments have been the introduction of techniques for precise control of the acoustic stimulus and the quantitative analysis of neuronal response patterns, notably by the laboratories of KIANG (e. g. GERSTEIN and KIANG, 1960; KIANG et at. , 1962b, 1965a, 1967) and ROSE (e. g. ROSE et at. , 1967; HIND et at. , 1967). These developments have made possible a large number of quantiΒ tative investigations of the behaviour of representative numbers of neurons at these levels of the peripheral auditory system under a wide variety of stimulus conditions. Most of the findings discussed herein have been obtained on anaesthetized cats. Where comparative data are available, substantially similar results have been obtained in other mammalian species (e. g. guinea pig, monkey, rat). Certain significant differences have been noted in lizards, frogs and fish as would be expectΒ ed from the different morphologies of their organs of hearing (e. g.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front Matter....Pages i-vii
Cochlear Nerve and Cochlear Nucleus....Pages 1-108
Physiological Studies of Auditory Nuclei of the Pons....Pages 109-144
Physiological Studies of the Inferior Colliculus and Medial Geniculate Complex....Pages 145-198
Single Unit Activity of the Auditory Cortex....Pages 199-218
Physiological Studies of the Efferent Recurrent Auditory System....Pages 219-246
The Influence of the External and Middle Ear on Auditory Discriminations....Pages 247-260
Behavioral Tests of Hearing and Inner Ear Damage....Pages 261-306
Behavioral Studies of Auditory Discrimination: Central Nervous System....Pages 307-400
Scaling....Pages 401-448
Localization of Sound....Pages 449-459
Binaural Analysis....Pages 461-480
Back Matter....Pages 481-527
β¦ Subjects
Acoustics; Medicine/Public Health, general
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
<p><P>The result of extensive collaboration among leaders of the worldwide auditory research community, Auditory Signal Processing: Physiology, Psychoacoustics, and Models is a record of the papers presented at the XIIIth International Symposium on Hearing (ISH) Dourdan, France, August 24 - 29, 2003
<p>In planning The Handbook volumes on Audition, we, the editors, made the decision that there should be many authors, each writing about the work in the field that he knew best through his own research, rather than a few authors who would review areas of research with which they lacked first hand f