| New Research pinpoints specific areas
in sound processing centers in the brains of macaque
monkies that shows enhanced activity when the animals
watch a video.
This study confirms a number of recent findings but
contradicts classical thinking, in which hearing, taste,
touch, sight, and smell are each processed in distinct
areas of the brain and only later integrated. The new
research, led by Christoph Kayser, Ph.D., at the Max
Planck Institute for Biological Cybernetics in Tübingen,
Germany, was published in the February 21st issue of
The Journal of Neuroscience.
"This study confirms that what we used to call
the 'auditory cortex' should really be thought of as
much more complex in terms of its response properties,"
says Robert Zatorre, PhD, head of the auditory cognitive
neuroscience laboratory at McGill University. "The
textbook-standard view of sensory systems as isolated
from one another is no longer tenable." Zatorre
did not participate in the study.
Kayser's team used functional magnetic resonance imaging
to draw a diagram of 11 small, tightly packed fields
in the monkeys' auditory cortex. Each field has a separate
map that covers the full range of frequencies. Scans
recorded activity in the monkeys' brains while they
watched a video, with and without sound, and listened
separately to the accompanying sound. The researchers
found that fields in the hindmost part of the auditory
cortex showed activity when the monkeys watched the
video without sound, and activity was enhanced when
the video was presented simultaneously with the sound.
"This finding suggests that sensory integration,
which is so fundamental to complex mental activity,
takes place at very early processing stages," says
Daniel Tranel, PhD, of the University of Iowa, who is
not affiliated with the study. "This knowledge
could help scientists pinpoint sources of extraordinary
sensory processing, such as creativity and genius, as
well as abnormal sensory processing, as seen in schizophrenia."
Kayser notes that the findings also could be used to
reveal the role of audio-visual integration in communication
or to help pin down where sounds are coming from. "Clearly,
our acoustical understanding often improves if we can
see the lips of the speaker -- for example at a crowded
cocktail party," he says. "However, currently
it is not clear whether and how audio-visual interactions
are specialized for the processing of communication
signals. "The present study clearly shows where
in the auditory system researchers have to focus."
The work was supported by the Max Planck Society, German
Research Foundation, and Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.
Adapted from materials provided by Society
for Neuroscience. |