Literature DB >> 23761696

Effects of spectral and temporal disruption on cortical encoding of gerbil vocalizations.

Maria Ter-Mikaelian1, Malcolm N Semple, Dan H Sanes.   

Abstract

Animal communication sounds contain spectrotemporal fluctuations that provide powerful cues for detection and discrimination. Human perception of speech is influenced both by spectral and temporal acoustic features but is most critically dependent on envelope information. To investigate the neural coding principles underlying the perception of communication sounds, we explored the effect of disrupting the spectral or temporal content of five different gerbil call types on neural responses in the awake gerbil's primary auditory cortex (AI). The vocalizations were impoverished spectrally by reduction to 4 or 16 channels of band-passed noise. For this acoustic manipulation, an average firing rate of the neuron did not carry sufficient information to distinguish between call types. In contrast, the discharge patterns of individual AI neurons reliably categorized vocalizations composed of only four spectral bands with the appropriate natural token. The pooled responses of small populations of AI cells classified spectrally disrupted and natural calls with an accuracy that paralleled human performance on an analogous speech task. To assess whether discharge pattern was robust to temporal perturbations of an individual call, vocalizations were disrupted by time-reversing segments of variable duration. For this acoustic manipulation, cortical neurons were relatively insensitive to short reversal lengths. Consistent with human perception of speech, these results indicate that the stable representation of communication sounds in AI is more dependent on sensitivity to slow temporal envelopes than on spectral detail.

Entities:  

Keywords:  auditory cortex; envelope cues; species-specific vocalizations; spike timing

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23761696      PMCID: PMC3763096          DOI: 10.1152/jn.00645.2012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Neurophysiol        ISSN: 0022-3077            Impact factor:   2.714


  51 in total

1.  Effects of auditory stimulus context on the representation of frequency in the gerbil inferior colliculus.

Authors:  B J Malone; M N Semple
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2001-09       Impact factor: 2.714

2.  Neural representations of sinusoidal amplitude and frequency modulations in the primary auditory cortex of awake primates.

Authors:  Li Liang; Thomas Lu; Xiaoqin Wang
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2002-05       Impact factor: 2.714

Review 3.  Neural processing of amplitude-modulated sounds.

Authors:  P X Joris; C E Schreiner; A Rees
Journal:  Physiol Rev       Date:  2004-04       Impact factor: 37.312

4.  The role of temporal cues in rhesus monkey vocal recognition: orienting asymmetries to reversed calls.

Authors:  A A Ghazanfar; D Smith-Rohrberg; M D Hauser
Journal:  Brain Behav Evol       Date:  2001       Impact factor: 1.808

5.  Multiple coding of species-specific vocalizations in the auditory cortex of squirrel monkeys.

Authors:  J D Newman; Z Wollberg
Journal:  Brain Res       Date:  1973-05-17       Impact factor: 3.252

6.  Transformed up-down methods in psychoacoustics.

Authors:  H Levitt
Journal:  J Acoust Soc Am       Date:  1971-02       Impact factor: 1.840

7.  Thalamocortical transformation of responses to complex auditory stimuli.

Authors:  O Creutzfeldt; F C Hellweg; C Schreiner
Journal:  Exp Brain Res       Date:  1980       Impact factor: 1.972

8.  Neural mechanisms supporting robust discrimination of spectrally and temporally degraded speech.

Authors:  Kamalini G Ranasinghe; William A Vrana; Chanel J Matney; Michael P Kilgard
Journal:  J Assoc Res Otolaryngol       Date:  2012-05-02

9.  Representation of species-specific vocalizations in the inferior colliculus of the guinea pig.

Authors:  Daniel Suta; Eugen Kvasnák; Jirí Popelár; Josef Syka
Journal:  J Neurophysiol       Date:  2003-08-27       Impact factor: 2.714

10.  Auditory cortex of squirrel monkey: response patterns of single cells to species-specific vocalizations.

Authors:  Z Wollberg; J D Newman
Journal:  Science       Date:  1972-01-14       Impact factor: 47.728

View more
  6 in total

1.  Robust Neuronal Discrimination in Primary Auditory Cortex Despite Degradations of Spectro-temporal Acoustic Details: Comparison Between Guinea Pigs with Normal Hearing and Mild Age-Related Hearing Loss.

Authors:  Yonane Aushana; Samira Souffi; Jean-Marc Edeline; Christian Lorenzi; Chloé Huetz
Journal:  J Assoc Res Otolaryngol       Date:  2018-01-04

2.  Seasonal plasticity of precise spike timing in the avian auditory system.

Authors:  Melissa L Caras; Kamal Sen; Edwin W Rubel; Eliot A Brenowitz
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2015-02-25       Impact factor: 6.167

Review 3.  Neural processing of natural sounds.

Authors:  Frédéric E Theunissen; Julie E Elie
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurosci       Date:  2014-06       Impact factor: 34.870

4.  Noise-Sensitive But More Precise Subcortical Representations Coexist with Robust Cortical Encoding of Natural Vocalizations.

Authors:  Samira Souffi; Christian Lorenzi; Léo Varnet; Chloé Huetz; Jean-Marc Edeline
Journal:  J Neurosci       Date:  2020-05-22       Impact factor: 6.167

5.  Restoration of function after cortical lesion: does it require an internal template?

Authors:  Holger Schulze; Konstantin Tziridis
Journal:  Neural Regen Res       Date:  2014-12-01       Impact factor: 5.135

6.  Laminar differences in response to simple and spectro-temporally complex sounds in the primary auditory cortex of ketamine-anesthetized gerbils.

Authors:  Markus K Schaefer; Manfred Kössl; Julio C Hechavarría
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-08-03       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.