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American Physiological Society, Journal of Neurophysiology, 2(94), p. 1655-1658

DOI: 10.1152/jn.01226.2004

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Microsecond Precision of Phase Delay in the Auditory System of the Barn Owl

Journal article published in 2005 by Sandra Brill, Hermann Wagner ORCID, Richard Kempter, Catherine E. Carr
This paper is available in a repository.
This paper is available in a repository.

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Data provided by SHERPA/RoMEO

Abstract

The auditory system encodes time with sub-millisecond accuracy. To shed new light on the basic mechanism underlying this precise temporal neuronal coding, we analyzed the neurophonic potential, a characteristic multiunit response, in the barn owl's nucleus laminaris. We report here that the relative time measure of phase delay is robust against changes in sound level, with a precision sharper than 20 micros. Absolute measures of delay, such as group delay or signal-front delay, had much greater temporal jitter, for example due to their strong dependence on sound level. Our findings support the hypothesis that phase delay underlies the sub-millisecond precision of the representation of interaural time difference needed for sound localization.