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1 l processing of speech sounds throughout the auditory system.
2  generates highly synchronized inputs to the auditory system.
3  an important role in the development of the auditory system.
4  is expressed in the inner hair cells of the auditory system.
5 ll excitability and refine maturation of the auditory system.
6 ual objects is facilitated by a hierarchical auditory system.
7 eurosensory restoration, particularly in the auditory system.
8  excitability in the circuits of the central auditory system.
9 affect asymmetry of speech processing in the auditory system.
10 e capacity to process information beyond the auditory system.
11 s and changes in GABAergic signalling in the auditory system.
12 ged cochleotopic maps throughout the central auditory system.
13  EPSC time-course at synapses in the central auditory system.
14 the mechanisms of temporal processing in the auditory system.
15 neuronal responses and behavior in the owl's auditory system.
16  good candidates for modulatory genes in the auditory system.
17 ngthens brain-behavior coupling in the aging auditory system.
18 ed at the sensory receptor epithelium in the auditory system.
19 ithin deep brain and cortical regions of the auditory system.
20 wer of second-order neurons in the ascending auditory system.
21 sponsible for developmental disorders of the auditory system.
22 rophysiological functions, especially in the auditory system.
23 nd the changing characteristics of the aging auditory system.
24 ological and peripheral changes of the aging auditory system.
25 nd the traditional boundaries of the central auditory system.
26 rst principle of organization throughout the auditory system.
27  the lack of KCC2a staining in the brainstem auditory system.
28  to improve learning and memory in the adult auditory system.
29 nervation of both the peripheral and central auditory system.
30 n distinct compensatory efforts of the aging auditory system.
31 nges in their density throughout the macaque auditory system.
32  identified as a fundamental property of the auditory system.
33 probably coordinating the development of the auditory system.
34 , have been linked to changes in the central auditory system.
35 r responses are suggestive of an inefficient auditory system.
36  or whether it is represented throughout the auditory system.
37 tor command signals to various levels of the auditory system.
38 equired for the functional maturation of the auditory system.
39 the site of the first synapse in the central auditory system.
40 in maintaining neurological integrity of the auditory system.
41 um dependence of adaptation in the mammalian auditory system.
42 , contributing toward the sensitivity of the auditory system.
43 d is retained throughout much of the central auditory system.
44 ptive plasticity may also be impaired in the auditory system.
45 nd poorly understood challenges faced by the auditory system.
46 perspective on FM biosonar processing in the auditory system.
47  information is not available in the central auditory system.
48 o decreases in the temporal precision of the auditory system.
49  (APs), which are transferred to the central auditory system.
50 ted at the level of the input to the central auditory system.
51 mple of this integration taking place in the auditory system.
52 an important aide for the performance of the auditory system.
53 s to diminish the overall sensitivity of the auditory system.
54 tem plasticity during the development of the auditory system.
55  enable the simultaneous satisfaction of the auditory system.
56 sequence of hierarchical organization in the auditory system.
57 pment leads to dysfunctional tonotopy of the auditory system.
58 atlases, and tools for researching the human auditory system.
59 or colliculus (IC) is the hub of the central auditory system.
60 ombined across frequency along the ascending auditory system.
61 ged cochleotopic maps throughout the central auditory system.
62 ent whether such a mechanism operates in the auditory system.
63  excitability in the circuits of the central auditory system.
64 n a different way from that in the visual or auditory systems.
65 the immune, reproductive, genitourinary, and auditory systems.
66 ure, with emphasis on maps of the visual and auditory systems.
67 ose in the immature mammalian vestibular and auditory systems.
68 of example sensory neurons in the visual and auditory systems.
69 nd specialized somatosensory, olfactory, and auditory systems.
70 ical role in both the peripheral and central auditory systems.
71 he large variation in mEPSC amplitude in the auditory system?
72 ic neurons of the calyx of Held in the mouse auditory system, a model synapse that allows precise bio
73 e a temporally precise signal and inform the auditory system about the occurrence of one's own sonic
74 conveys a vocal motor signal and informs the auditory system about the physical attributes of a self-
75 iments and modeling imply, however, that the auditory system achieves this performance for only a nar
76 rdependent forces that have been shaping the auditory systems across taxa: the physical environment o
77 le (e.g., in binaural hearing), how much the auditory system actually uses the AM as a distance cue r
78 ealed that permanent damage can occur to the auditory system after exposure to a noise that produces
79  al. investigate consequences in the central auditory system after profound cochlear denervation.
80 ise is an important feature of the mammalian auditory system and a necessary feature for successful h
81 roperty of both the subcortical and cortical auditory system and accounts for the short-term adaptabi
82 nt medial olivocochlear (MOC) pathway of the auditory system and CaM is abundant in OHCs, the CaM-pre
83  one of the most fundamental percepts in the auditory system and can be extracted using either spectr
84 em, between sensory systems, and between the auditory system and centres serving higher order neuroco
85 that association processes take place in the auditory system and do not necessarily rely on associati
86 stage of descending control of the mammalian auditory system and exert influence on cochlear mechanic
87  for the organization and development of the auditory system and hair cells.
88 y detectors operating at lower levels of the auditory system and higher auditory cognitive functions
89 y detectors operating at lower levels of the auditory system and higher auditory cognitive functions
90 ved between MEG signals originating from the auditory system and the attended stream at <1, 1-4, and
91  sounds masked by noise at each stage of the auditory system and to quantify the noise effects on the
92 n is fundamental to stimulus localization in auditory systems and depth perception in vision, but the
93 to generate a prediction error signal in the auditory system (and vice versa for auditory leading asy
94 mputing features found more centrally in the auditory system, and an Object analysis, where sounds ar
95 vation are encoded by neurons throughout the auditory system, and auditory cortex is necessary for so
96 y speaking, the systems-level anatomy of the auditory system, and by extension the processing of audi
97 associated with the locus coeruleus complex, auditory system, and motor, neuromodulatory and autonomi
98 ty and sound localization, maturation of the auditory system, and the evolutionary adaptations occurr
99 ensorimotor transformations in the zebrafish auditory system are a continuous and gradual process tha
100                Some neurons in the mammalian auditory system are able to detect and report the coinci
101 ng characteristics of neurons in the central auditory system are directly shaped by and reflect the s
102 show that many fundamental properties of the auditory system are established early in development, an
103           Interestingly, only in the central auditory system are intensity-selective neurons evolved.
104 ons that convey motor-related signals to the auditory system are theorized to facilitate vocal learni
105                                              Auditory systems are adept at detecting and segregating
106 sts of electrical activity in the developing auditory system arise within the cochlea before hearing
107 sh whether speech envelope is encoded in the auditory system as a phonological (speech-related), or i
108 encoding of speech sounds in the subcortical auditory system as being shaped by acoustic, linguistic,
109  environment is an important function of the auditory system, as a rapid response may be required for
110 und localization and pitch perception in the auditory system, as well as perception in nonauditory se
111  to sensory processing, in particular in the auditory system, because most auditory signals only have
112 e-related tuning of attention, the bilingual auditory system becomes highly efficient in automaticall
113              After hearing a tone, the human auditory system becomes more sensitive to similar tones
114 ation of the developing ascending (afferent) auditory system before hearing begins.
115 effective connectivity is altered within the auditory system, between sensory systems, and between th
116                                              Auditory systems bias responses to sounds that are unexp
117 alogue Kiaa0319-like reported effects in the auditory system but not in neuronal migration.
118 in a phenotype involving both the visual and auditory systems but different from typical Usher syndro
119 rom lesions occurring at any location in the auditory system, but its mechanisms are poorly understoo
120 s a key anatomical feature of the vertebrate auditory system, but little is known about the mechanism
121 gans: they detect oscillatory stimuli in the auditory system, but transduce constant and step stimuli
122 n the maturation of the ascending (afferent) auditory system by inhibiting spontaneous activity of th
123 an gerbil with subcortical structures of the auditory system by means of the axonal transport of two
124 des support for the alerting function of the auditory system by showing an auditory-phasic alerting e
125                             In this way, the auditory system can develop and simultaneously maintain
126 vious auditory experience and imply that the auditory system can identify the category of a sound bas
127 Recent psychoacoustic studies have shown the auditory system can rapidly adapt to efficiently encode
128  of excitation and inhibition in the central auditory system (CAS) may play an important role in hype
129                                       In the auditory system, central neurons are optimized to retain
130 vity arising from two phenomena of the aging auditory system: cochlear histopathologies and increased
131                                          The auditory system computes sound location by detecting sub
132  Hair cells of the vertebrate vestibular and auditory systems convert mechanical inputs into electric
133                      It is not clear how the auditory system deals with this problem, or which implic
134  reptilian auditory system, or the mammalian auditory system, demonstrating an essential similarity o
135         Mechanotransduction in the mammalian auditory system depends on mechanosensitive channels in
136 ties for investigating the human subcortical auditory system, describes challenges that remain, and c
137 ata3 is essential for the earliest stages of auditory system development and for survival and synapto
138 a3 is critical for later stages of mammalian auditory system development where it plays distinct, com
139                        In the brainstem, the auditory system diverges into two pathways that process
140 all, the results indicate that the ascending auditory system does the work of segregating auditory st
141  decline in neural processing of the central auditory system during age-related hearing loss.
142 undergoes major developmental changes in the auditory system during the third trimester of pregnancy.
143 esults support the hypothesis that the human auditory system employs (at least) a 2-timescale process
144 may help deepen our understanding of how the auditory system encodes and represents acoustic regulari
145 findings inform the understanding of how the auditory system encodes socially-relevant signals via de
146 n EEG signal that is used to explore how the auditory system encodes temporal regularities in sound a
147                                       In the auditory system, endogenously released ATP in the cochle
148 can impair the computational capacity of the auditory system, even when it does not simply dampen aud
149                             Furthermore, the auditory system exhibits a highly rapid response time, i
150 re we provide a new understanding of how the auditory system extracts behaviorally relevant informati
151 les and provide evidence suggesting that the auditory system extracts fine-detail acoustic informatio
152                                      How the auditory system extracts harmonic structures embedded in
153                                How the human auditory system extracts perceptually relevant acoustic
154 with reading disorders arises from the human auditory system failing to respond to sound in a consist
155                                       In the auditory system, FMRP deficiency alters neuronal functio
156 t and function of the peripheral and central auditory systems, focusing on those with demonstrated in
157 tory research, which have put forward insect auditory systems for studying biological aspects that ex
158                                       In the auditory system, for example, previous studies have repo
159 elopment leads to lasting changes in central auditory system function.
160 by the stark correlation between the time of auditory system functional maturity, and the cessation o
161 y mimics the selective perception of a human auditory system has been pursued over the past decades.
162 reasons for speech being special is that our auditory system has evolved to encode it in an efficient
163 oss saccades and pupil dilation, the primate auditory system has fewer means of differentially sampli
164 pheral impairment.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The auditory system has many mechanisms to maximize the dyna
165 ed to different causes, which means that the auditory system has to choose between them.
166 ssion of various proteins within the central auditory system have been associated with natural aging.
167 ing, parallels between insect and vertebrate auditory systems have been uncovered, and the auditory s
168 re selectivity and invariance in the central auditory system, highlighting a major difference between
169 vironments pose a difficult challenge to the auditory system: how to focus attention on selected soun
170                                       In the auditory system, IGF-1 is crucial for restoring synaptic
171                                          The auditory system in many mammals is immature at birth but
172 h-evoked responses at multiple levels of the auditory system in older musicians who were also better
173 f neuronal populations at five levels of the auditory system in response to conspecific vocalizations
174 ignificant data regarding development of the auditory system in rodents, changes in intrinsic propert
175  nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB) of the auditory system in the CNS.
176 IHC activity and maturation of the ascending auditory system in the developing cochlea.
177 d this idea by placing the somatosensory and auditory systems in competition during speech motor lear
178 rated, occurs beyond the classically defined auditory system, in limbic or association neocortical re
179                                The mammalian auditory system includes a brainstem-mediated efferent p
180 the descending vocal-motor and the ascending auditory systems, including portions of the telencephalo
181                                       In the auditory system, inhibition already modulates second ord
182                             In the mammalian auditory system, initial connections form at embryonic a
183                                In the mature auditory system, inner hair cells (IHCs) convert sound-i
184                            In the developing auditory system, inner hair cells (IHCs) spontaneously f
185                                       In the auditory system, intrinsically generated activity arises
186                                          The auditory system is able to detect movement down to atomi
187 estioned whether the deaf and immature human auditory system is able to integrate input delivered fro
188 ening in challenging situations, or when the auditory system is damaged, strains cortical resources,
189                                          The auditory system is heavily myelinated and operates at th
190 opmental and physiological complexity of the auditory system is likely reflected in the underlying se
191 ditory cortex in O. garnetti, suggesting the auditory system is more developed at birth in primates c
192     However, this multi-scale process in the auditory system is not widely investigated in the litera
193                 This suggests that the human auditory system is optimized to track rapid (phonemic) m
194 posed of complex overlapping sounds that the auditory system is required to segregate into discrete p
195                                     The left auditory system is specialized for processing of phoneme
196              A fundamental goal of the human auditory system is to map complex acoustic signals onto
197 ntaneous action potentials in the developing auditory system is underpinned by the stark correlation
198  attention on single neuron responses in the auditory system is unresolved.
199 he correct establishment and function of the auditory system, is regulated by the efferent medial oli
200                                       In the auditory system, large somatic synapses convey strong ex
201 itus can occur when damage to the peripheral auditory system leads to spontaneous brain activity that
202                                      How the auditory system leverages this crossmodal information at
203                                      How the auditory system manages to extract intelligible speech u
204 ion to learning a specific tutor's song, the auditory system may also undergo critical developmental
205        Overall, our results suggest that the auditory system may possess dual mechanisms that make th
206 elephone due to a transmission problem), the auditory system may restore the missing portion so that
207                            Where and how the auditory system might encode these summary statistics to
208  channels, as are their roles in the central auditory system, mostly evaluated in brainstem nuclei.
209 n information on multiple timescales, so the auditory system must analyze and integrate acoustic info
210                 To accomplish this feat, the auditory system must segregate sounds that overlap in fr
211 accurately recognize these signals, animals' auditory systems must robustly represent acoustic featur
212 ral different response properties in central auditory system neurons and that GABA is the major inhib
213               Studying the human subcortical auditory system non-invasively is challenging due to its
214 ct and indirect modulation of the peripheral auditory system of a vocal nonmammalian vertebrate.
215 ficantly reduced only in white matter of the auditory system of aged monkeys, while thalamocortical F
216 igated the site where ILD is detected in the auditory system of barn owls, the posterior part of the
217                This issue was studied in the auditory system of barn owls.
218 ted density changes throughout the ascending auditory system of both rodents and macaque monkeys.
219 ell documented within neurons of the central auditory system of both rodents and primates.
220  We investigated the ability of cells in the auditory system of guinea pigs to compare interaural lev
221 we describe the systems-level anatomy of the auditory system of the African wild dog.
222                                 Studying the auditory system of the fruit fly can reveal how hearing
223                                    The early auditory system of the grasshopper produces a temporally
224 n pictus) has led to the assumption that the auditory system of this unique canid may be specialized.
225                                          The auditory systems of animals that perceive sounds in air
226 ting similarities and differences in how the auditory systems of frogs and other vertebrates (most no
227                      Instead, the peripheral auditory system operates as though it contains an expone
228  across stimulus levels, with the peripheral auditory system operating as though its overall transfer
229  deficiency of HGF expression limited to the auditory system, or an overexpression of HGF, causes neu
230 e amphibian vestibular system, the reptilian auditory system, or the mammalian auditory system, demon
231  sound sources that overlap in time, and the auditory system parses the complex sound wave into strea
232             Acoustic signals received by the auditory system pass first through an array of physiolog
233 ted spectral notch, we here suggest that the auditory system performs a weighted spectral analysis ac
234  MGB neurons revealed additional features of auditory system plasticity associated with tinnitus, whi
235  between sounds-a striking capability of the auditory system-plays an essential role in animals' surv
236 can jointly shape vocal signal structure and auditory systems, potentially driving acoustic diversity
237 presents the first definite evidence for the auditory system prioritizing transitional probabilities
238  hearing animals have shown that the central auditory system progressively converts temporal represen
239                                          The auditory system provides opportunities to study the topo
240 e to stimuli with correlated attributes, the auditory system rapidly adapts so as to more efficiently
241 t inhibition of the primary receptors of the auditory system re-emerges with hearing impairment.
242  show that, from birth to hearing onset, the auditory system relies on a consistent mechanism to elic
243 mination of sound detection performed by the auditory system rely on the dynamics of a system of hair
244 s in the presence of background noise in the auditory system remain largely unresolved.
245                    Sensory processing in the auditory system requires that synapses, neurons, and cir
246                                       In the auditory system, rhythmic bursts of spontaneous activity
247        Sound source perception refers to the auditory system's ability to parse incoming sensory info
248 ner ear's active process, which enhances the auditory system's sensitivity to weak sounds, but their
249 ure of acoustic stimuli is a hallmark of the auditory system's temporal precision and is important fo
250 cture of acoustic stimuli, a hallmark of the auditory system's temporal precision, is important for m
251 ical property of MET that contributes to the auditory system's wide dynamic range and sharp frequency
252 rovided little information about the central auditory system, scattered data suggest that some genes
253                       We show that the human auditory system selectively and preferentially tracks ac
254 ealing striking parallels with the mammalian auditory system.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Noise exposure is
255                                       In the auditory system, sound localization must account for mov
256                                       In the auditory system, sounds are processed in parallel freque
257  demonstrate that, in a mechanically coupled auditory system, specialization for directional hearing
258                                       In the auditory system, spontaneous activity of cochlear inner
259                  In the developing mammalian auditory system, spontaneous calcium action potentials a
260 erential developmental trajectory of central auditory system structures and demonstrate the early ons
261 uitry operates in the olfactory, visual, and auditory systems, suggesting a potentially shared mechan
262 ierarchical levels of processing through the auditory system suggests that the GABAergic circuits act
263            Here we provide evidence that the auditory system summarizes the temporal details of sound
264 o fine tune the developing properties of the auditory system that enable these aspects remains unclea
265 ged because of fundamental properties of the auditory system that result in superior time encoding fo
266 underlying the development of the peripheral auditory system, the cochlea and its afferent auditory n
267                                      For the auditory system, the FIR filter is instantiated in the s
268                                       In the auditory system, the hair cells convert sound-induced me
269                                       In the auditory system, the mechanisms that confer direction se
270                                 In mammalian auditory systems, the spiking characteristics of each pr
271 ese results suggest that, when ascending the auditory system, there is a transformation in coding AM
272                                       In the auditory system, these declines include neural timing de
273 l and hyperactive firing patterns within the auditory system, these results open up the possibility f
274                                       In the auditory system, this transformation is revealed by resp
275 scending control of the mammalian peripheral auditory system through axon projections to the cochlea.
276 tention has been paid to the response of the auditory system to "natural stimuli," very few psychophy
277 ons and play a critical role in allowing the auditory system to adapt to changes in the spatial cues
278 emory which may influence the ability of the auditory system to detect gaps in an acoustic stimulus s
279       Localizing a sound source requires the auditory system to determine its direction and its dista
280 eption is not limited by the capacity of the auditory system to encode fast acoustic variations throu
281 f research, the exact mechanisms used by the auditory system to extract pitch are still being debated
282 n pitch changes, adapt the resistance of the auditory system to extraneous sounds across auditory sce
283 nt solution to this problem would be for the auditory system to represent sounds in a noise-invariant
284 omical/physiological model of the peripheral auditory system to show that temporal correlation in amp
285 rate the remarkable sensitivity of the human auditory system to sporadically reoccurring structure wi
286 r, the apparent sensitivity of the mammalian auditory system to the statistics of incoming sound has
287  of multi-timescale information requires the auditory system to work over distinct ranges.
288                                       In the auditory system, type I spiral ganglion neurons (SGNs) p
289                                    Thus, the auditory system uses a consistent mechanism involving AT
290  exerting tight control over parameters, the auditory system uses a homeostatic mechanism that increa
291 ay compensate for loss of specificity in the auditory system via sensorimotor integration.
292 electivity and tolerance exists in the avian auditory system, we trained European starlings (Sturnus
293 explain our results by a model, in which the auditory system weighs the different spectral bands, and
294 ption factors associated with the peripheral auditory system were up-regulated, probably coordinating
295 bil inferior colliculus (IC), the hub of the auditory system where inputs from parallel brainstem pat
296 alth of tissues and organs, including in the auditory system where metabolic alterations are implicat
297 receptor (nAChR) was first identified in the auditory system, where it mediates synaptic transmission
298  the superior olivary nuclear complex of the auditory system, while not exhibiting additional nuclei
299 general acoustic feature, we also probed the auditory system with a melodic stimulus.
300 nt of inputs from the visual cortex (V1) and auditory system with retinal axons in the SC, there is a

 
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