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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 5 November 1999, pp. 2503-2517
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Electronics and Informatics, Toyama Prefectural University, Toyama 939-0398, Japan
Nakamura, Kiyomi
Auditory Spatial Discriminatory and Mnemonic Neurons in Rat
Posterior Parietal Cortex. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 2503-2517, 1999. The present study was designed to investigate
whether the rat posterior parietal cortex is involved in the perception
and the representation of the auditory space. We recorded single neural activity in the posterior parietal cortex of rats that performed a
directional delayed nonmatching-to-sample task. In the task, cue tones
were presented in one of six speakers that were placed symmetrically
around the rats. "Familiar tones" were those repeatedly used in the
course of behavioral training. Novel tones were presented only during
the unit recording time and less frequently used (e.g., only once in
alternate weeks). The responses of the posterior parietal cortex
neurons were typically tested with familiar cue tones while the rats
were situated in a particular geomagnetic orientation. The same cells
were further tested while the rats were reoriented by 180°, or by
novel cue tones. As the task included a delay period, in which the cue
tone was removed, the rats had to maintain the directional information
of the cue tones during this period to maximize the reward rates. A
well-trained rat could perform the task with 85% success. We found two
major types of neurons intermixed in the rat posterior parietal cortex.
One type (n = 14) mainly discriminated the
direction of the cue tones, whereas the other (n = 36) carried a mnemonic value of the cue tones while the tones were
removed. The former responded only during the cue tone period
(discriminatory neurons), whereas the latter responded during the cue
tone period and the delay period (mnemonic neurons). These cells also
exhibited broad directional tuning. The results agreed with previous
studies, suggesting that a population coding scheme exists in the
posterior parietal cortex. When the cells were tested with novel tones
or when the rats were rotated through 180°, the vast majority of the
cells exhibited a directional tuning similar to those under the control
conditions. Three quarters (18/24) of the cells that exhibited a
mnemonic characteristic persisted in their directional preference when the rat's orientation was changed (12/17 neurons) or when an
unfamiliar auditory stimulus was used (6/7 neurons). Half of the
discriminatory neurons (4/8 neurons) persisted in their directional
preference. These results, consistent with previous behavioral studies,
suggest an allocentric representation of the auditory processing in
this area. Furthermore, when the rat was reoriented or an unfamiliar cue tone was used, both the average and peak directional responses were
enhanced in more than half of the mnemonic or discriminatory neurons.
These results support the frequency-dependent neocortical gating
hypothesis of the entorhinal hippocampal loop.
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