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Abstract

Whether physical navigation shares neural substrates with mental travel in other behaviourally relevant domains is debated. With respect to sound, pure tone working memory in humans elicits hippocampal as well as auditory cortical and inferior frontal activity, and rodent work suggests that hippocampal cells that usually track an animal's physical location can also map to tone frequency when task-relevant. We generated a sound dimension based on the density of random-frequency tones in a stack, resulting in a percept ranging from low- ("beepy") to high-density ("noisy"). We established that unlike tone frequency, which listeners automatically associate with vertical position, this density dimension elicited no consistent spatial mapping. During functional magnetic resonance imaging, human participants (both sexes) held in mind the density of a series of tone stacks and, after a short maintenance period, adjusted further stacks to match the target ("navigation"). Density was represented most strongly in bilateral non-primary auditory cortex, specifically bilateral planum polare. Encoding and maintenance activity in hippocampus, inferior frontal gyrus, planum polare and posterior cingulate was positively associated with subsequent navigation success. Bilateral inferior frontal gyrus and hippocampus were among regions with elevated activity during navigation, compared to a parity-judgment condition with closely matched acoustics and motor demands. Bilateral orbitofrontal cortex was more active when navigation was toward a target density than when participants adjusted density in a control condition with no particular target. We find that self-initiated travel along a non-spatial auditory dimension engages a brain system overlapping with that supporting physical navigation.

Competing Interest Statement

The authors have declared no competing interest.

Details

1009240
Title
Brain bases for navigating acoustic features
Publication title
bioRxiv; Cold Spring Harbor
Publication year
2025
Publication date
Feb 10, 2025
Section
New Results
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Source
BioRxiv
Place of publication
Cold Spring Harbor
Country of publication
United States
University/institution
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
Publication subject
ISSN
2692-8205
Source type
Working Paper
Language of publication
English
Document type
Working Paper
ProQuest document ID
3165216837
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/working-papers/brain-bases-navigating-acoustic-features/docview/3165216837/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
© 2025. This article is published under http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ (“the License”). Notwithstanding the ProQuest Terms and Conditions, you may use this content in accordance with the terms of the License.
Last updated
2025-02-11
Database
ProQuest One Academic