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Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol 63, Issue 5 1128-1147, Copyright © 1990 by APS
ARTICLES |
Z. M. Fuzessery, J. J. Wenstrup and G. D. Pollak
Department of Zoology, University of Texas, Austin 78712.
1. The monaural and binaural response properties and the horizontal sound location sensitivity of 78 binaurally excited neurons from 26 bats were examined with a combined closed-field and free-field stimulation paradigm. The aim was to determine how the response properties of these neurons shape their selectivity for auditory space. All neurons were recorded within a single, greatly enlarged isofrequency (60 kHz) region of the mustache bat's central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICC). In this and two companion papers (Wenstrup et al. 1988a,b) that focused on binaurally inhibited neurons in this isofrequency region, our goal was to examine the neural mechanisms for binaural processing within a single frequency channel of the primary auditory system. 2. Binaurally excited neurons were defined as either excited by monaural input from both ears or, if excited by monaural stimulation of only one ear, facilitated by binaural stimulation. Some neurons also exhibited binaural inhibition. These neurons were divided into functional classes based on their responses to monaural and binaural stimulation presented under dichotic, closed-field conditions. The following notation was used: response to contralateral stimulation (E, excitatory; O, no effect), response to ipsilateral stimulation (E, excitatory; O, no effect)/response to binaural stimulation (F, facilitatory; I, inhibitory; O, no effect). Seven functional classes were observed: EE/O, EE/F, EE/I, EE/FI, EO/F, EO/FI, and OO/F. 3. Among EE neurons, thresholds for contralateral monaural stimulation were typically lower than for ipsilateral stimulation, and response magnitudes for contralateral stimulation were typically greater. Among EO/F and EO/FI neurons, only one eye, an OE/FI neuron, was excited by ipsilateral monaural stimulation. These results suggest that contralateral input provides the dominant excitatory influence. EE/FI and EO/FI neurons, which exhibited both binaural facilitation and inhibition, were typically inhibited at interaural intensity differences (IIDs) favoring the ipsilateral ear, suggesting that ipsilateral input provides the dominant inhibitory influence. 4. Neurons were tested over the range of naturally occurring IIDs (+/- 30 dB) at intensities of -20 to 30 dB relative to threshold. The IID functions of these neurons assumed three configurations: flat, with facilitation occurring at all IIDs; stepped, with facilitation occurring over part of the IID range, and peaked, with facilitation occurring over a limited band of IIDs. The majority of cells (90%) exhibited peaked IID functions, and most of these (73%), regardless of functional class, were maximally facilitated at an IID of 0 dB. 5. Neurons differed considerably in the strength of their binaural interactions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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