Literature DB >> 12822799

A nonlinear filter-bank model of the guinea-pig cochlear nerve: rate responses.

Christian J Sumner1, Lowel P O'Mard, Enrique A Lopez-Poveda, Ray Meddis.   

Abstract

The aim of this study is to produce a functional model of the auditory nerve (AN) response of the guinea-pig that reproduces a wide range of important responses to auditory stimulation. The model is intended for use as an input to larger scale models of auditory processing in the brain-stem. A dual-resonance nonlinear filter architecture is used to reproduce the mechanical tuning of the cochlea. Transduction to the activity on the AN is accomplished with a recently proposed model of the inner-hair-cell. Together, these models have been shown to be able to reproduce the response of high-, medium-, and low-spontaneous rate fibers from the guinea-pig AN at high best frequencies (BFs). In this study we generate parameters that allow us to fit the AN model to data from a wide range of BFs. By varying the characteristics of the mechanical filtering as a function of the BF it was possible to reproduce the BF dependence of frequency-threshold tuning curves, AN rate-intensity functions at and away from BF, compression of the basilar membrane at BF as inferred from AN responses, and AN iso-intensity functions. The model is a convenient computational tool for the simulation of the range of nonlinear tuning and rate-responses found across the length of the guinea-pig cochlear nerve.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 12822799     DOI: 10.1121/1.1568946

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am        ISSN: 0001-4966            Impact factor:   1.840


  13 in total

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5.  Mode-locked spike trains in responses of ventral cochlear nucleus chopper and onset neurons to periodic stimuli.

Authors:  Jonathan Laudanski; Stephen Coombes; Alan R Palmer; Christian J Sumner
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6.  An analytic physically motivated model of the mammalian cochlea.

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Review 7.  Auditory midbrain implant: research and development towards a second clinical trial.

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8.  Potassium conductance dynamics confer robust spike-time precision in a neuromorphic model of the auditory brain stem.

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9.  Revisiting Models of Concurrent Vowel Identification: The Critical Case of No Pitch Differences.

Authors:  Samuel S Smith; Ananthakrishna Chintanpalli; Michael G Heinz; Christian J Sumner
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10.  Retuning of inferior colliculus neurons following spiral ganglion lesions: a single-neuron model of converging inputs.

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