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Computational Principles of Auditory Cortex

November 19, 2018 @ 3:00 pm - 4:00 pm

CMSA-Colloquium-111918

Speaker: Xiaoqin Wang (Johns Hopkins University)

Title: Computational Principles of Auditory Cortex

Abstract: Auditory cortex is located at the top of a hierarchical processing pathway in the brain that encodes acoustic information. This brain region is crucial for speech and music perception and vocal production. Auditory cortex has long been considered a difficult brain region to study and remained one of less understood sensory cortices. Studies have shown that neural computation in auditory cortex is highly nonlinear. In contrast to other sensory systems, the auditory system has a longer pathway between sensory receptors and the cerebral cortex. This unique organization reflects the needs of the auditory system to process time-varying and spectrally overlapping acoustic signals entering the ears from all spatial directions at any given time. Unlike visual or somatosensory cortices, auditory cortex must also process and differentiate sounds that are externally generated or self-produced (during speaking). Neural representations of acoustic information in auditory cortex are shaped by auditory feedback and vocal control signals during speaking. Our laboratory has developed a unique and highly vocal non-human primate model (the common marmoset) and quantitative tools to study neural mechanisms underlying audition and vocal communication.

Details

Date:
November 19, 2018
Time:
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
Event Category:

Venue

CMSA
20 Garden Street
Cambridge, MA 02138 United States
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