Bh. Bonham et Er. Lewis, Localization by interaural time difference (ITD): Effects of interaural frequency mismatch, J ACOUST SO, 106(1), 1999, pp. 281-290
A commonly accepted physiological model for lateralization of low-frequency
sounds by interaural time delay (ITD) stipulates that binaural comparison
neurons receive input from frequency-matched channels from each ear. Here,
the effects of hypothetical interaural frequency mismatches on this model a
re reported. For this study, the cat's auditory system peripheral to the bi
naural comparison neurons was represented by a neurophysiologically derived
model, and binaural comparison neurons were represented by cross-correlato
rs. The results of the study indicate that, for binaural comparison neurons
receiving input from one cochlear channel from each ear, interaural CF mis
matches may serve to either augment or diminish the effective difference in
ipsilateral and contralateral axonal time delays from the periphery to the
binaural comparison neuron. The magnitude of this increase or decrease in
the effective time delay difference can be up to 400 mu s for CF mismatches
of 0.2 octaves or less for binaural neurons with CFs between 250 Hz and 2.
5 kHz. For binaural comparison neurons with nominal CFs near 500 Hz, the 25
-mu s effective time delay difference caused by a 0.012-octave CF mismatch
is equal to the ITD previously shown to be behaviorally sufficient for the
cat to lateralize a low-frequency sound source. (C) 1999 Acoustical Society
of America. [S0001-4966(99)05206-6].