Gai Y, Ruhland JL, Yin TC. Behavior and modeling of twodimensional precedence effect in head-unrestrained cats. J Neurophysiol 114: 1272Neurophysiol 114: -1285Neurophysiol 114: , 2015. First published July 1, 2015; doi:10.1152/jn.00214.2015.-The precedence effect (PE) is an auditory illusion that occurs when listeners localize nearly coincident and similar sounds from different spatial locations, such as a direct sound and its echo. It has mostly been studied in humans and animals with immobile heads in the horizontal plane; speaker pairs were often symmetrically located in the frontal hemifield. The present study examined the PE in head-unrestrained cats for a variety of pairedsound conditions along the horizontal, vertical, and diagonal axes. Cats were trained with operant conditioning to direct their gaze to the perceived sound location. Stereotypical PE-like behaviors were observed for speaker pairs placed in azimuth or diagonally in the frontal hemifield as the interstimulus delay was varied. For speaker pairs in the median sagittal plane, no clear PE-like behavior occurred. Interestingly, when speakers were placed diagonally in front of the cat, certain PE-like behavior emerged along the vertical dimension. However, PE-like behavior was not observed when both speakers were located in the left hemifield. A Hodgkin-Huxley model was used to simulate responses of neurons in the medial superior olive (MSO) to sound pairs in azimuth. The novel simulation incorporated a lowthreshold potassium current and frequency mismatches to generate internal delays. The model exhibited distinct PE-like behavior, such as summing localization and localization dominance. The simulation indicated that certain encoding of the PE could have occurred before information reaches the inferior colliculus, and MSO neurons with binaural inputs having mismatched characteristic frequencies may play an important role.localization; echo threshold; medial superior olive; head-related transfer function; free field LOCALIZATION OF SOUND SOURCES is often challenging in real life due to the presence of background noise or reverberation. The precedence effect (PE) demonstrates that the auditory system has evolved to ignore reflected sound copies and attend to the direct veridical sound sources. Experimentally, PE-like behaviors are usually examined in nonreverberant sound chambers using accurately timed sound sources to mimic sound reflections. In addition, the majority of behavioral studies were conducted in animal or human subjects with immobile heads during the presentation of paired sound sources. One could argue that restricting head movements may help achieve consistent behavior and enhance stimulus control. On the other hand, in real life our heads can move freely while we perceive sound locations. Thus any echo-suppressing mechanism would be less useful if it only works under head-restrained conditions.In psychophysical experiments involving the PE, the interstimulus delay (ISD) between two sound sources is an important parameter. A widel...