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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 1 January 2000, pp. 128-138
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology and Beckman Institute, University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois 61801
Galazyuk, Alexander V.,
Daniel Llano, and
Albert S. Feng.
Temporal Dynamics of Acoustic Stimuli Enhance Amplitude Tuning of
Inferior Colliculus Neurons. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 128-138, 2000. Sounds in real-world situations
seldom occur in isolation. In spite of this, most studies in the
auditory system have employed sounds that serve to isolate
physiological responses, namely, at low rates of stimulation. It is
unclear, however, whether the basic response properties of a neuron
derived thereof, such as its amplitude and frequency selectivities, are
applicable to real-world situations where sounds occur in rapid
succession. In the present study, we investigated one of the basic
response properties of neurons in the bat inferior colliculus (IC),
i.e., the rate-level function, to tone pulses in three different
configurations: individual tone pulses of constant amplitude at
different rates of stimulation, random-amplitude pulse trains, and
dynamic-amplitude-modulated pulse trains the temporal pattern of which
was similar to what bats encounter in a behavioral context. We reported
that for the majority of IC neurons, amplitude selectivity to tone
pulses was dependent on the rate of stimulation. In general, the
selectivity was greater at high rates or in a behavioral context than
at low rates. For a small population of IC neurons, however, the rate of stimulation had little or no effect on their rate-level functions. Thus for IC neurons, responses to sounds presented at low rates may or
may not be used to predict the responses to the same stimuli presented
at high rates or in a behavioral context. The possible neural
mechanisms underlying the rate-dependent effects are discussed.
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