Brain's frequency following responses to low-frequency and infrasound


Abstract:

Complaints and awareness about environmental low-frequency (LF) noise and infrasound (IS) have increased in recent years, but knowledge about perceptual mechanisms is limited. To evaluate the use of the brain's frequency-following response (FFR) as an objective correlate of individual sensitivity to IS and LF, we recorded the FFR to monaurally presented IS (11 Hz) and LF (38 Hz) tones over a 30-phon range for 11 subjects. It was found that 11-Hz FFRs were often significant already at _0 phon, steeply grew to 20 phon, and saturated above. In contrast, the 38-Hz FFR growth was relatively shallow and continued to 60 phon. Furthermore, at the same loudness level (30 phon), the 11-Hz FFR strength was significantly larger (4.5 dB) than for 38 Hz, possibly reflecting a higher phase synchronization across the auditory pathway. Overall, unexpected inter-individual variability as well as qualitative differences between the measured FFR growth functions and typical loudness growth make interpretation of the FFR as objective correlate of IS and LF sensitivity difficult.

Año de publicación:

2020

Keywords:

  • infrasound
  • Frequency-following response
  • Auditory brain
  • low-frequency hearing

Fuente:

scopusscopus
googlegoogle

Tipo de documento:

Article

Estado:

Acceso restringido

Áreas de conocimiento:

  • Cognición

Áreas temáticas:

  • Fisiología humana
  • Enfermedades