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Visually-induced auditory spatial adaptation in monkeys and humans Norbert Kopčo, I-Fan Lin, Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Jennifer Groh Center for Cognitive.

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Presentation on theme: "Visually-induced auditory spatial adaptation in monkeys and humans Norbert Kopčo, I-Fan Lin, Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Jennifer Groh Center for Cognitive."— Presentation transcript:

1 Visually-induced auditory spatial adaptation in monkeys and humans Norbert Kopčo, I-Fan Lin, Barbara Shinn-Cunningham, Jennifer Groh Center for Cognitive Neuroscience, Duke University Hearing Research Center, Boston University Technical University, Košice, Slovakia

2 2Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Introduction Vision affects auditory spatial perception (e.g. the ventriloquist effect) Visually-induced shifts in sound localization can persist in the absence of visual stimuli (e.g. barn owl prism adaptation studies)

3 3Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego QUESTION How does vision calibrate sound perception in primates? - monkeys and humans Unlike barn owls, monkeys and humans make eye movements. With every eye movement, the relationship between visual space and auditory space changes.

4 4Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Visual and auditory spatial information are different! VISION: Retina provides “map” of object locations Locations shift when eyes move Frame of reference is “eye- centered”

5 5Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Visual and auditory spatial information are different! AUDITORY: Sound location calculated from interaural timing and level differences Cue values do NOT shift when eyes move Frame of reference is “head-centered”

6 6Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Goals Does visual-calibration of auditory space occur in eye-centered, head-centered, or a hybrid coordinate system? Are humans and monkeys similar?

7 7Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Experimental Setup Audiovisual display as viewed by the subject Horizontal location (degrees) Vertical location (degrees) 9 speakers in front of listener (~1 m distance), separated by 7.5° (humans) or 6° (monkeys) Light-emitting diodes (LEDs) at three center speakers: - aligned with speakers, or - displaced to the left or to the right (by 5°-humans, 6°-monkeys) 2 LEDs below speaker array used as fixation points (FP) Stimuli: Auditory stimulus: 300-ms broadband noise burst Audio-Visual stimulus: Same noise with synchronously lid LED.

8 8Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Experiment: Data Presentation Format Sample Stimulus-Response Raw Data Plot Actual Stimulus Location (°) Perceived / Responded Location (°) Sample Plot Showing Bias in Responses (Response – Actual Location) Actual Stimulus Location (°) Bias in Responses (°) Rightward bias Leftward bias Rightward bias Leftward bias

9 9Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Experiment: Hypothesis 1. Induce Ventriloquist Effect for AV stimuli presented in central sub- region of space, keeping fixation point on the right ( +8°) 2. Test that adaptation results in the effect being present also for Auditory-only stimuli (same FP). 3. Induced shift will decrease outside the trained sub-region (for the same FP). 4. Move FP to the left. Test effect on Auditory-only stimuli: - No change  Head-centered. - Response pattern moves with eyes  Eye-centered. - Combined representations. Stimulus Location (°) Bias (°) Audiovisual display Expected Responses FP LEDs Speakers

10 10Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Experiment: Procedure Audiovisual display as viewed by the subject Horizontal location (degrees) Vertical location (degrees) One trial consists of: 1. Fixation point (FP) appears. 2. Subject fixates FP. 3. Target stimulus is presented (Audio-Visual or Auditory-only). 4. Subject saccades to perceived location of stimulus (humans instructed to always saccade to sound). 5. Monkeys only: Reward for responding within a criterion window (+- 10° from speaker).

11 11Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Experiment: Procedure Experiment divided into 1-hour blocks (12 for humans, 16 for monkeys; 7 humans, 2 monkeys). Within a block three types of trials, randomly interleaved: Three types of AV stimuli (AV stimulus type kept constant within a block. Data also collected with AV FP on left. These data mirror-flipped to simplify presentation. For monkeys, also AV- aligned stimuli at +-30° to enforce non-linearity): AV stimuli: 50 % FP LEDs Speakers A-only,trained FP: 25%A-only,shifted FP: 25% AV stimuli aligned Hypometric shift Hypermetric shift

12 12Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Results: Humans Stimulus Location (°) Audiovisual display Expected Responses FP LEDs Speakers Human Behavior Data collapsed across direction of induced shift AV responses: - as expected Trained FP A-only responses: - Shift induced in trained sub-region - Generalization to untrained regions (asymmetrical) Shifted FP A-only responses: - Shift reduced in center region Head-centered repre- sentation, modulated by eye position Mean+SE

13 13Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Results: Humans vs. Monkeys Audiovisual display FP LEDs Speakers Human Behavior Monkey data (only hypometric) AV responses: - as expected Trained FP A-only responses: - Shift in trained sub- region weaker - Generalization to untrained regions stronger (asymmetry opposite to humans) Shifted FP A-only responses: - Shifted with eyes Representation more eye-centered Mean+SE Monkey Behavior Mean 6 6 -24 0 24 Mean+individuals Mean+SE Mean+individuals

14 14Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Summary Good news – the main results are consistent across species: Locally induced ventriloquist effect results in short-term adaptation, causing shifts in responses to A-only stimuli from trained sub-region. The pattern of induced shift is modified as the eyes move. Bad news – there is a lot of differences between species: HumansMonkeys Representationhead-centered, eye-modulatedeye-centered Generalization to untrained sub-regionsmore on the side away from FPopposite Difference between hyper- and hypometric shiftsnoyes Representation when shift induced on side (data not shown)head-centered, no eye modulationeye-centered

15 15Nov 6, 2007SFN 07 San Diego Discussion The differences between species can be caused by: 1. differences in neural representation and/or learned behavior E.g., monkeys often respond by double saccades 2. differences in the stage along the pathway at which the calibration occurs (Insert figure of ear->CN->SOC->IC->MGB->Aud. Ctx->Parietal Ctx->SC->oculomotor) E.g., in humans, the head-centered shift was induced fast, while the eye-centered modulation was much slower  different time scales may imply adaptation at different stages 3. procedural differences (e.g., monkeys work for water) Future work: Humans: examine temporal and spatial factors influencing the eye-centered modulation. Monkeys: attempt to induce stronger effect using larger A-V separation.


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