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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 82 No. 5 November 1999, pp. 2528-2544
Copyright ©1999 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Neurobiology, Northeastern Ohio Universities College of Medicine, Rootstown, Ohio 44272-0095
Wenstrup, Jeffrey J.
Frequency Organization and Responses to Complex Sounds in the
Medial Geniculate Body of the Mustached Bat. J. Neurophysiol. 82: 2528-2544, 1999. The auditory
cortex of the mustached bat (Pteronotus parnellii)
displays some of the most highly developed physiological and organizational features described in mammalian auditory cortex. This
study examines response properties and organization in the medial
geniculate body (MGB) that may contribute to these features of auditory
cortex. About 25% of 427 auditory responses had simple frequency
tuning with single excitatory tuning curves. The remainder displayed
more complex frequency tuning using two-tone or noise stimuli. Most of
these were combination-sensitive, responsive to combinations of
different frequency bands within sonar or social vocalizations. They
included FM-FM neurons, responsive to different harmonic elements of
the frequency modulated (FM) sweep in the sonar signal, and H1-CF
neurons, responsive to combinations of the bat's first sonar harmonic
(H1) and a higher harmonic of the constant frequency (CF) sonar signal.
Most combination-sensitive neurons (86%) showed facilitatory
interactions. Neurons tuned to frequencies outside the biosonar range
also displayed combination-sensitive responses, perhaps related to
analyses of social vocalizations. Complex spectral responses were
distributed throughout dorsal and ventral divisions of the MGB, forming
a major feature of this bat's analysis of complex sounds. The auditory
sector of the thalamic reticular nucleus also was dominated by complex
spectral responses to sounds. The ventral division was organized
tonotopically, based on best frequencies of singly tuned neurons and
higher best frequencies of combination-sensitive neurons. Best
frequencies were lowest ventrolaterally, increasing dorsally and then
ventromedially. However, representations of frequencies associated with
higher harmonics of the FM sonar signal were reduced greatly. Frequency organization in the dorsal division was not tonotopic; within the
middle one-third of MGB, combination-sensitive responses to second and
third harmonic CF sonar signals (60-63 and 90-94 kHz) occurred in
adjacent regions. In the rostral one-third, combination-sensitive responses to second, third, and fourth harmonic FM frequency bands predominated. These FM-FM neurons, thought to be selective for delay
between an emitted pulse and echo, showed some organization of delay
selectivity. The organization of frequency sensitivity in the MGB
suggests a major rewiring of the output of the central nucleus of the
inferior colliculus, by which collicular neurons tuned to the bat's FM
sonar signals mostly project to the dorsal, not the ventral, division.
Because physiological differences between collicular and MGB neurons
are minor, a major role of the tecto-thalamic projection in the
mustached bat may be the reorganization of responses to provide for
cortical representations of sonar target features.
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