Title
Sparse Codes of Harmonic Natural Sounds and their Modulatory Interactions
Abstract
Sparse coding and its related theories have been successful to explain various response properties of early stages of sensory information processing such as primary visual cortex and peripheral auditory system, which suggests that the emergence of such properties results from adaptation of the verve system to natural stimuli. The present study continues this line of research in a higher stage of auditory processing, focusing on harmonic structures that are often found in behaviorally important natural sound like animal vocalization. It has been physiologically shown that monkey primary auditory cortices (a1) have neurons with response properties capturing such harmonic structures: their response and modulation peaks are often found at frequencies that are harmonically related to each other. We hypothesize that such relations emerge from sparse coding of harmonic natural sounds. Our simulation shows that similar harmonic relations emerge from frequency-domain sparse coding of harmonic natural sounds, namely piano performance and human speech. Moreover, the modulatory behaviors can be explained by competitive interactions of model neurons that capture partially common harmonic structures.
Authors
Hiroki Terashima, Haruo Hosoya
Citation
Terashima, H., & Hosoya, H. (2009). Sparse Codes of Harmonic Natural Sounds and their Modulatory Interactions. Network: Computation in Neural Systems, 20(4), 253-267