Sound localization is a listener's ability to identify the location or origin of a detected sound or the methods in acoustical engineering to simulate the placement of an auditory cue in a virtual 3D space (see binaural recording).
There are two general methods for sound localization, binaural cues and monaural cues.
In vertebrates, inter-aural time differences are known to be calculated in the superior olivary nucleus of the brainstem. The calculation is believed to rely on delay lines: neurons in the superior olive accept innervation from each ear with different connecting axon lengths. Some cells are more directly connected to one ear than the other, thus they are specific for a particular inter-aural time difference.
The tiny parasitic fly Ormia ochracea has become a model organism for studying sound localization in animals too small for ITDs to be calculated in the usual way. In this animal, the tympanic membranes of opposite ears are directly connected mechanically, allowing resolution of nanosecond time differences and requiring a new neural coding strategy.
In order to enhance filtering information, many animals have evolved large, specially shaped outer ears. Many also have the ability to turn the outer ear at will, which allows for better sound localization and also better sound detection. Bats and barn owls are paragons of monaural localization in the animal kingdom, and have thus become model organisms.
Processing of head-related transfer functions for biological sound localization occurs in the auditory cortex.
In general, humans are best at judging sound source azimuth, then elevation, and worst at judging distance. Source distance is qualitatively obvious to a human observer when a sound is extremely close (the mosquito in the ear effect), or when sound is echoed by large structures in the environment (such as walls and ceiling). Such echoes provide reasonable cues to the distance of a sound source, in particular because the strength of echoes does not depend on the distance of the source, while the strength of the sound that arrives directly from the sound source becomes weaker with distance. The ratio of direct-to-echo strength alters the quality of the sound in a way to which humans are sensitive. In this way consistent, although not very accurate, distance judgments are possible. This method fails outdoors, due to a lack of echoes.
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"Sound localization".
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