Research in hearing science often relies on auditory models to describe listener's behaviour and its neural underpinning in acoustic environments. These models gather empirical evidence from behavioural data to address research questions on the neural mechanisms underlying sound perception. Despite seemingly similar statistical methods, auditory models are often implemented for each study separately, which hinders reproducibility and across-study comparisons, thus limiting the advancement at a field level. Here, we introduce a framework for studying neural mechanisms of sound perception by employing auditory modeling based on Bayesian inference (FrAMBI), a MATLAB/Octave toolbox. FrAMBI provides a standardized structure to implement an auditory model following the perception-action cycle and enables the automatic application of statistical analysis with behavioural data. We show FrAMBI's capabilities in several examples with increasing levels of complexity within the context of sound source localisation tasks: a basic implementation for a static scenario, iterating over the perception-action cycle with a moving sound source, the definition of multiple model variants testing different neural mechanisms, and the procedure for parameter estimation and model comparison. Being integrated into the widely used auditory modelling toolbox (AMT), FrAMBI is planned to be maintained in the long term and expanded accordingly, fostering reproducible research in the field of neuroscience.
FrAMBI: A Software Framework for Auditory Modeling Based on Bayesian Inference
Barumerli, Roberto
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2025-01-01
Abstract
Research in hearing science often relies on auditory models to describe listener's behaviour and its neural underpinning in acoustic environments. These models gather empirical evidence from behavioural data to address research questions on the neural mechanisms underlying sound perception. Despite seemingly similar statistical methods, auditory models are often implemented for each study separately, which hinders reproducibility and across-study comparisons, thus limiting the advancement at a field level. Here, we introduce a framework for studying neural mechanisms of sound perception by employing auditory modeling based on Bayesian inference (FrAMBI), a MATLAB/Octave toolbox. FrAMBI provides a standardized structure to implement an auditory model following the perception-action cycle and enables the automatic application of statistical analysis with behavioural data. We show FrAMBI's capabilities in several examples with increasing levels of complexity within the context of sound source localisation tasks: a basic implementation for a static scenario, iterating over the perception-action cycle with a moving sound source, the definition of multiple model variants testing different neural mechanisms, and the procedure for parameter estimation and model comparison. Being integrated into the widely used auditory modelling toolbox (AMT), FrAMBI is planned to be maintained in the long term and expanded accordingly, fostering reproducible research in the field of neuroscience.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.