Interaural phase and level difference sensitivity in low-frequency neurons in the lateral superior olive.
نویسندگان
چکیده
The lateral superior olive (LSO) is believed to encode differences in sound level at the two ears, a cue for azimuthal sound location. Most high-frequency-sensitive LSO neurons are binaural, receiving inputs from both ears. An inhibitory input from the contralateral ear, via the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB), and excitatory input from the ipsilateral ear enable level differences to be encoded. However, the classical descriptions of low-frequency-sensitive neurons report primarily monaural cells with no contralateral inhibition. Anatomical and physiological evidence, however, shows that low-frequency LSO neurons receive low-frequency inhibitory input from ipsilateral MNTB, which in turn receives excitatory input from the contralateral cochlear nucleus and low-frequency excitatory input from the ipsilateral cochlear nucleus. Therefore, these neurons would be expected to be binaural with contralateral inhibition. Here, we re-examined binaural interaction in low-frequency (less than approximately 3 kHz) LSO neurons and phase locking in the MNTB. Phase locking to low-frequency tones in MNTB and ipsilaterally driven LSO neurons with frequency sensitivities <1.2 kHz was enhanced relative to the auditory nerve. Moreover, most low-frequency LSO neurons exhibited contralateral inhibition: ipsilaterally driven responses were suppressed by raising the level of the contralateral stimulus; most neurons were sensitive to interaural time delays in pure tone and noise stimuli such that inhibition was nearly maximal when the stimuli were presented to the ears in-phase. The data demonstrate that low-frequency LSO neurons of cat are not monaural and can exhibit contralateral inhibition like their high-frequency counterparts.
منابع مشابه
Analysis of Sensory Coding in the Lateral Superior Olive
The fundamental questions of sensory neuroscience are how neurons encode information and how neurons extract (process) information. For example, in the auditory system, sound location is determined by a combination of amplitude and time cues. The Lateral Superior Olive (LSO), one of the first nuclei to receive inputs from both ears, is thought to extract high-frequency localization information ...
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AM Amplitude modulation AN Auditory nerve BD Best delay BMF Best modulation frequency BF Best frequency CD Characteristic delay CN Cochlear nucleus CP Characteristic phase CR Chopping rate DCN Dorsal cochlear nucleus DNLL Dorsal nucleus of the lateral lemniscus EI Contralaterally excited and ipsilaterally inhibited EI/F EI with facilitation F0 Fundamental frequency IC Inferior colliculus ICC Ce...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience
دوره 25 46 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2005