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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 81 No. 5 May 1999, pp. 2075-2087
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Bioengineering and 2Department of Otorhinolaryngology: Head and Neck Surgery, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
Doan, Daryl E. and
James C. Saunders.
Sensitivity to Simulated Directional Sound Motion in the Rat
Primary Auditory Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 81: 2075-2087, 1999.
Sensitivity to simulated directional sound motion in the rat primary
auditory cortex. This paper examines neuron responses in rat
primary auditory cortex (AI) during sound stimulation of the two ears
designed to simulate sound motion in the horizontal plane. The
simulated sound motion was synthesized from mathematical equations that
generated dynamic changes in interaural phase, intensity, and Doppler
shifts at the two ears. The simulated sounds were based on moving
sources in the right frontal horizontal quadrant. Stimuli consisted of
three circumferential segments between 0 and 30°, 30 and 60°, and
60 and 90° and four radial segments at 0, 30, 60, and 90°. The
constant velocity portion of each segment was 0.84 m long. The
circumferential segments and center of the radial segments were
calculated to simulate a distance of 2 m from the head. Each
segment had two trajectories that simulated motion in both directions,
and each trajectory was presented at two velocities. Young adult rats
were anesthetized, the left primary auditory cortex was exposed, and
microelectrode recordings were obtained from sound responsive cells in
AI. All testing took place at a tonal frequency that most closely
approximated the best frequency of the unit at a level 20 dB above the
tuning curve threshold. The results were presented on polar plots that
emphasized the two directions of simulated motion for each segment
rather than the location of sound in space. The trajectory exhibiting a
"maximum motion response" could be identified from these plots.
"Neuron discharge profiles" within these trajectories were used
to demonstrate neuron activity for the two motion directions. Cells
were identified that clearly responded to simulated uni- or
multidirectional sound motion (39%), that were sensitive to sound
location only (19%), or that were sound driven but insensitive to our
location or sound motion stimuli (42%). The results demonstrated the
capacity of neurons in rat auditory cortex to selectively process
dynamic stimulus conditions representing simulated motion on the
horizontal plane. Our data further show that some cells were responsive
to location along the horizontal plane but not sensitive to motion. Cells sensitive to motion, however, also responded best to the moving
sound at a particular location within the trajectory. It would seem
that the mechanisms underlying sensitivity to sound location as well as
direction of motion converge on the same cell.
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