Head-related transfer functions of rabbits within the front horizontal plane

Hear Res. 2023 Dec 2;441:108924. doi: 10.1016/j.heares.2023.108924. Online ahead of print.ABSTRACTThe head-related transfer function (HRTF) describes the direction-dependent acoustic filtering by the head that occurs between a source signal in free-field space and the signal at the tympanic membrane. HRTFs contain information on sound source location via interaural differences of their magnitude or phase spectra and via the shapes of their magnitude spectra. The present study characterized HRTFs for source locations in the front horizontal plane for nine rabbits, which are a species commonly used in studies of the central auditory system. HRTF magnitude spectra shared several features across individuals, including a broad spectral peak at 2.6kHz that increased gain by 12 to 23dB depending on source azimuth; and a notch at 7.6kHz and peak at 9.8kHz visible for most azimuths. Overall, frequencies above 4kHz were amplified for sources ipsilateral to the ear and progressively attenuated for frontal and contralateral azimuths. The slope of the magnitude spectrum between 3 and 5kHz was found to be an unambiguous monaural cue for source azimuths ipsilateral to the ear. Average interaural level difference (ILD) between 5 and 16kHz varied monotonically with azimuth over ±31dB despite a relatively small head size. Interaural time differences (ITDs) at 0.5kHz and 1.5kHz also varied monotonically with azimuth over ±358 μs and ±260 μs, respectively. Remeasurement of HRTFs after pinna...
Source: Hearing Research - Category: Audiology Authors: Source Type: research
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