Your brain is better at tracking moving sounds than previously thought

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The human brain can recognise and track sounds as they move better than previously thought, according to Dutch researchers. While previous research has shown human eyes struggle to follow moving sounds as smoothly as they would moving objects, the researchers instead measured the head movements of 11 people as they tracked sounds in a dark room. The subjects were able to follow the sounds with remarkable accuracy.

Media release

From: Society for Neuroscience

The Auditory System Tracks Moving Sounds

Just like the visual system, the brain’s auditory system tracks the speed and location of moving sounds

The brain’s auditory system tracks the speed and location of moving sounds in the same way the visual system tracks moving objects. The study recently published in eNeuro lays the groundwork for more detailed research on how humans hear in dynamic environments.

People who use hearing aids have trouble discriminating sounds in busy environments. Understanding if and how the auditory system tracks moving sounds is vital to improving hearing aid technology. Prior research utilizing eye movements to gauge whether the brain is following the trajectory of a moving sound indicates it cannot. A new study from García-Uceda Calvo et al. instead used head movements, a more accurate measure of sound tracking.

The team analyzed head movements of hearing participants as they tracked randomly moving sounds in a dark room. Their analysis revealed humans follow moving sounds, with great accuracy. The auditory system actively tracks the velocity of a sound, just like the visual system, rather than changes in position. The participants improved their sound tracking ability over the course of the experiment, a sign the auditory system was picking up on hidden patterns in the sound trajectories and making predictions. These results indicate the brain possess cells and circuits dedicated to tracking the velocity of sounds.

Journal/
conference:
eNeuro
Research:Paper
Organisation/s: Radboud University, Netherlands
Funder: his research was funded by the European Union Program FP7-PEOPLE-2013-ITN ’HealthPAC’, Nr. 604063 (JAGUC, MMvW), and European Union Horizon 2020 ERC Advanced Grant-2016 ’Orient’, Nr. 693400 (AJvO).
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