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Predictive coding and stochastic resonance as fundamental principles of auditory perception

Authors :
Schilling, Achim
Sedley, William
Gerum, Richard
Metzner, Claus
Tziridis, Konstantin
Maier, Andreas
Schulze, Holger
Zeng, Fan-Gang
Friston, Karl J.
Krauss, Patrick
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

How is information processed in the brain during perception? Mechanistic insight is achieved only when experiments are employed to test formal or computational models. In analogy to lesion studies, phantom perception may serve as a vehicle to understand the fundamental processing principles underlying auditory perception. With a special focus on tinnitus -- as the prime example of auditory phantom perception -- we review recent work at the intersection of artificial intelligence, psychology, and neuroscience. In particular, we discuss why everyone with tinnitus suffers from hearing loss, but not everyone with hearing loss suffers from tinnitus. We argue that the increase of sensory precision due to Bayesian inference could be caused by intrinsic neural noise and lead to a prediction error in the cerebral cortex. Hence, two fundamental processing principles - being ubiquitous in the brain - provide the most explanatory power for the emergence of tinnitus: predictive coding as a top-down, and stochastic resonance as a complementary bottom-up mechanism. We conclude that both principles play a crucial role in healthy auditory perception.<br />Comment: arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:2010.01914

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2204.03354
Document Type :
Working Paper