Distribution of multiunit pitch responses recorded intracranially from human auditory cortex

Author:

Berger Joel I1ORCID,Gander Phillip E1ORCID,Kikuchi Yukiko2ORCID,Petkov Christopher I12ORCID,Kumar Sukhbinder1ORCID,Kovach Christopher1ORCID,Oya Hiroyuki1ORCID,Kawasaki Hiroto1ORCID,Howard Matthew A1ORCID,Griffiths Timothy D2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurosurgery , 1800 JPP, 200 Hawkins Drive, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA 52242 , United States

2. Biosciences Institute , Newcastle upon Tyne NE2 4HH , United Kingdom

Abstract

Abstract The perception of pitch is a fundamental percept, which is mediated by the auditory system, requiring the abstraction of stimulus properties related to the spectro-temporal structure of sound. Despite its importance, there is still debate as to the precise areas responsible for its encoding, which may be due to species differences or differences in the recording measures and choices of stimuli used in previous studies. Moreover, it was unknown whether the human brain contains pitch neurons and how distributed such neurons might be. Here, we present the first study to measure multiunit neural activity in response to pitch stimuli in the auditory cortex of intracranially implanted humans. The stimulus sets were regular-interval noise with a pitch strength that is related to the temporal regularity and a pitch value determined by the repetition rate and harmonic complexes. Specifically, we demonstrate reliable responses to these different pitch-inducing paradigms that are distributed throughout Heschl’s gyrus, rather than being localized to a particular region, and this finding was evident regardless of the stimulus presented. These data provide a bridge across animal and human studies and aid our understanding of the processing of a critical percept associated with acoustic stimuli.

Funder

Wellcome Trust

Medical Research Council

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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