April 14, 2005 01 h 01 min
April 14, 2005 24 min
May 12, 2005 52 min
February 4, 2005 01 h 18 min
October 17, 2007 49 min
June 27, 2007 01 h 12 min
July 11, 2007 48 min
September 12, 2007 01 h 07 min
September 19, 2007 01 h 13 min
September 26, 2007 01 h 00 min
October 3, 2007 01 h 12 min
October 10, 2007 01 h 10 min
October 24, 2007 50 min
November 21, 2007 57 min
0:00/0:00
The most important task perceptual systems absolve to is to recover what objects in the environment gave rise to the sensory stimulus. The auditory system is no exception to this: everyday we recognize not only speakers or musical instruments, but also cars approaching, leaves rustling, and glasses clinking.
In this talk, I will outline the research I carried out to understand what properties of the sound source are perceived and represented by cortical processes, and the role of acoustical structure in this process.
I will briefly describe a series of studies on: [1] the perception of sound-object materials; [2] on the modeling of acoustical structure for timbre perception; [3] on the role of acoustic and semantic information for the perceptual dissimilarity of environmental sounds.
I will finally describe in more detail a series of neuroimaging studies that aimed to understand: [1] the cortical anatomy for the processing of the identity of sound sources; [2] the encoding of time-varying acoustical structure in brain oscillations; [3] the representation of sound-category information in spatial fMRI patterns.