Acoustic change complex evoked by horizontal sound location change in young adults with normal hearing
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Fan, Zhi-Tong; Zhao, Zi-Hui; Sharma, Mridula; Valderrama Valenzuela, Joaquín Tomás; Fu, Qian-Jie; Liu, Jia-Xing; Fu, Xin; Li, Huan; Zhao, Xue-Lei; Guo, Xin-Yu; Fu, Luo-Yi; Wang, Ning-Yu; Zhang, JuanEditorial
Frontiers Media SA
Fecha
2022-06Referencia bibliográfica
Fan ZT, Zhao ZH, Sharma M, Valderrama JT, Fu QJ, Liu JX, Fu X, Li H, Zhao XL, Guo XY, Fu LY, Wang NY, Zhang J. Acoustic change complex evoked by horizontal sound location change in young adults with normal hearing. Frontiers in Neuroscience (2022) 16, 908989. doi: 10.3389/fnins.2022.908989.
Patrocinador
National Key Research and Development Program of China; National Natural Science Foundation of China; Capital’s Funds for Health Improvement and ResearchResumen
Acoustic change complex (ACC) is a cortical auditory-evoked potential induced by a change of continuous sound stimulation. This study aimed to explore: (1) whether the change of horizontal sound location can elicit ACC; (2) the relationship between the change of sound location and the amplitude or latency of ACC; (3) the relationship between the behavioral measure of localization, minimum audible angle (MAA), and ACC. A total of 36 normal-hearing adults participated in this study. A 180º horizontal arc-shaped bracket with a 1.2 m radius was set in a sound field where participants sat at the center. MAA was measured in a two-alternative forced-choice setting. The objective electroencephalography recording of ACC was conducted with the location changed at four sets of positions. The test stimulus was a 125–6,000 Hz broadband noise of 1 s at 60 +- 2 dB SPL with a 2 s interval. The N10–P20 amplitudes, N10 latencies, and P20 latencies of ACC under four positions were evaluated. The influence of electrode sites and the direction of sound position change on ACC waveform was analyzed with analysis of variance. Results suggested that (1) ACC can be elicited successfully by changing the horizontal sound location position. The elicitation rate of ACC increased with the increase of location change. (2) N10–P20 amplitude increased and N10 and P20 latencies decreased as the change of sound location increased. The effects of test angles on N10–P20 amplitude [F(1.91,238.1) = 97.172, p < 0.001], N10 latency [F(1.78,221.90) = 96.96, p < 0.001], and P20 latency [F(1.87,233.11) = 79.97, p < 0.001] showed a statistical significance. (3) The direction of sound location change had no significant effect on any of the ACC peak amplitudes or latencies. (4) Sound location discrimination threshold by the ACC test (97.0% elicitation rate at +-5º) was higher than MAA threshold (2.08 +- 0.5º). The current study results show that though the ACC thresholds are higher than the behavioral thresholds on MAA task, ACC can be used as an objective method to evaluate sound localization ability. This article discusses the implications of this research for clinical practice and evaluation of localization skills, especially for children.