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1.
We examined the auditory response properties of neurons in the medial geniculate body of unanesthetized little brown bats (Myotis lucifugus). The units' selectivities to stimulus frequency, amplitude and duration were not significantly different from those of neurons in the inferior colliculus (Condon et al. 1994), which provides the primary excitatory input to the medial geniculate body, or in the auditory cortex (Condon et al. 1997) which receives primary input from the medial geniculate body. However, in response to trains of unmodulated tone pulses, the upper cutoff frequency for time-locked discharges (64 ± 46.9 pulses per second or pps) and the mean number of spikes per pulse (19.2 ± 12.2 pps), were intermediate to those for the inferior colliculus and auditory cortex. Further, in response to amplitude-modulated pulse trains, medial geniculate body units displayed a degree of response facilitation that was intermediate to that of the inferior colliculus and auditory cortex inferior colliculus: 1.32 ± 0.33; medial geniculate body: 1.75 ± 0.26; auditory cortex: 2.52 ± 0.96, P < 0.01). These data suggest that the representation of isolated tone pulses is not significantly altered along the colliculo-thalamo-cortical axis, but that the fidelity of representation of temporally patterned signals progressively degrades along this axis. The degradation in response fidelity allows the system to better extract the salient feature in complex amplitude-modulated signals. Accepted: 9 January 1999  相似文献   

2.
The weakly electric fish, Eigenmannia, changes its frequency of electric organ discharges (EODs) to increase the frequency difference between its EODs and those of a jamming neighbor. This jamming avoidance response is greatest for frequency differences (i.e., beat rates) of approximately 4 Hz and barely detectable at beat rates of 20 Hz. A neural correlate of this behavior is found in the torus semicircularis, where most neurons act as low-pass or band-pass filters over this range of beat rates.This study examines two mechanisms that could possibly underlie low-pass temporal filtering: 1) Inhibition by a high-pass interneuron. 2) Voltage and time-dependent conductances associated with ligand-gated channels. These mechanisms were tested by recording intracellularly while employing stimuli consisting of simultaneous low and high beat rates. A neuron's response to the low beat rate was not diminished by the addition of the higher frequency jamming signal (thereby superimposing a high rate of amplitude and phase modulation onto the lower rate), and the inhibitory interneuron hypothesis is, therefore, not supported. Also, the responses to the high beat rate were not facilitated during maintained depolarization in response to the low beat rate.In some cases, particularly band-pass neurons, accommodation processes appeared to contribute to the decline in the amplitude of psps at high beat rates.  相似文献   

3.
Traditionally, the medial superior olive, a mammalian auditory brainstem structure, is considered to encode interaural time differences, the main cue for localizing low-frequency sounds. Detection of binaural excitatory and inhibitory inputs are considered as an underlying mechanism. Most small mammals, however, hear high frequencies well beyond 50 kHz and have small interaural distances. Therefore, they can not use interaural time differences for sound localization and yet possess a medial superior olive. Physiological studies in bats revealed that medial superior olive cells show similar interaural time difference coding as in larger mammals tuned to low-frequency hearing. Their interaural time difference sensitivity, however, is far too coarse to serve in sound localization. Thus, interaural time difference sensitivity in medial superior olive of small mammals is an epiphenomenon. We propose that the original function of the medial superior olive is a binaural cooperation causing facilitation due to binaural excitation. Lagging inhibitory inputs, however, suppress reverberations and echoes from the acoustic background. Thereby, generation of antagonistically organized temporal fields is the basic and original function of the mammalian medial superior olive. Only later in evolution with the advent of larger mammals did interaural distances, and hence interaural time differences, became large enough to be used as cues for sound localization of low-frequency stimuli. Accepted: 28 February 2000  相似文献   

4.
Single-unit recordings were made from 143 neurons in the frog (Rana p. pipiens) inferior colliculus (IC) to investigate how free-field sound direction influenced neural responses to sinusoidal-amplitude-modulated (SAM) tone and/or noise. Modulation transfer functions (MTFs) were derived from 3 to 5 sound directions within 180° of frontal field. Five classes of MTF were observed: low-pass, high-pass, band-pass, multi-pass, and all-pass. For 64% of IC neurons, the MTF class remained unchanged when sound direction was shifted from contralateral 90° to ipsilateral 90°. However, the MTFs of more than half of these neurons exhibited narrower bandwidths when the loudspeaker was shifted to ipsilateral azimuths. There was a decrease in the cut-off frequency for neurons possessing low-pass MTFs, an increase in cut-off frequency for neurons showing high-pass MTFs, or a reduction in the pass-band for neurons displaying bandpass MTFs. These results suggest that sound direction can influence amplitude modulation (AM) frequency tuning of single IC neurons.Since changes in periodicity of SAM tones alter both the temporal parameters of sounds as well as the sound spectrum, we examined whether directional effects on spectral selectivity play a role in shaping the observed direction-dependent AM selectivity. The directional influence on AM selectivity to both SAM tone and SAM noise was measured in 62 neurons in an attempt to gain some insight into the mechanisms that underlie directionally-induced changes in AM selectivity. Direction-dependent changes in the shapes of the tone and noise derived MTFs were different for the majority of IC neurons (55/62) tested. These data indicate that a spectrally-based and a temporally-based mechanism may be responsible for the observed results.Abbreviations AM amplitude modulation - CF characteristic frequency - DI direction index - FR isointensity frequency response - GABA gamma-aminobutyric acid - IC inferior colliculus - ICc central nucleus of the inferior colliculus - ITD interaural time difference - MTF modulation transfer function - PSTH peri-stimulus time histogram - SAM sinusoidal-amplitude-modulated - SC synchronization coefficient - CN cochlear nucleus  相似文献   

5.
Responses of auditory neurons in the torus semicircularis (TS) of Pleurodema thaul, a leptodactylid from Chile, to synthetic stimuli having diverse temporal patterns and to digitized advertisement calls of P. thaul and three sympatric species, were recorded to investigate their temporal response selectivities. The advertisement call of this species consists of a long sequence of sound pulses (a pulse-amplitude-modulated, or PAM, signal) having a dominant frequency of about 2000 Hz. Each of the sound pulses contains intra-pulse sinusoidal-amplitude-modulations (SAMs). Synthetic stimuli consisted of six series in which the following acoustic parameters were systematically modified, one at a time: PAM rate, pulse duration, number of pulses, and intra-pulse SAM rate. The carrier frequency of these stimuli was set at the characteristic frequency (CF) of the isolated units (n = 47). Response patterns of TS units to synthetic call variants reveal different degrees of selectivities for each of the temporal variables, with populations of neurons responding maximally to specific values found in the advertisement call of this species. These selectivities are mainly shaped by neuronal responsiveness to the overall sound energy of the stimulus and by the inability of neurons to discharge to short inter-pulse gaps. Accepted: 30 October 1996  相似文献   

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