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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 83 No. 4 April 2000, pp. 2300-2314
Copyright ©2000 by the American Physiological Society
Zoologisches Institut, Universität München, D-80333 Munich, Germany
Koch, U. and
B. Grothe.
Interdependence of Spatial and Temporal Coding in the
Auditory Midbrain. J. Neurophysiol. 83: 2300-2314, 2000. To date, most physiological studies that
investigated binaural auditory processing have addressed the topic
rather exclusively in the context of sound localization. However, there
is strong psychophysical evidence that binaural processing serves more
than only sound localization. This raises the question of how binaural processing of spatial cues interacts with cues important for feature detection. The temporal structure of a sound is one such feature important for sound recognition. As a first approach, we investigated the influence of binaural cues on temporal processing in the mammalian auditory system. Here, we present evidence that binaural cues, namely
interaural intensity differences (IIDs), have profound effects on
filter properties for stimulus periodicity of auditory midbrain neurons
in the echolocating big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus. Our
data indicate that these effects are partially due to changes in
strength and timing of binaural inhibitory inputs. We measured filter
characteristics for the periodicity (modulation frequency) of
sinusoidally frequency modulated sounds (SFM) under different binaural
conditions. As criteria, we used 50% filter cutoff frequencies of
modulation transfer functions based on discharge rate as well as
synchronicity of discharge to the sound envelope. The binaural
conditions were contralateral stimulation only, equal stimulation at
both ears (IID = 0 dB), and more intense at the ipsilateral ear
(IID =
20,
30 dB). In 32% of neurons, the range of modulation
frequencies the neurons responded to changed considerably comparing
monaural and binaural (IID =0) stimulation. Moreover, in ~50% of
neurons the range of modulation frequencies was narrower when the
ipsilateral ear was favored (IID =
20) compared with equal
stimulation at both ears (IID = 0). In ~10% of the neurons synchronization differed when comparing different binaural cues. Blockade of the GABAergic or glycinergic inputs to the cells recorded from revealed that inhibitory inputs were at least partially
responsible for the observed changes in SFM filtering. In 25% of the
neurons, drug application abolished those changes. Experiments using
electronically introduced interaural time differences showed that the
strength of ipsilaterally evoked inhibition increased with increasing
modulation frequencies in one third of the cells tested. Thus
glycinergic and GABAergic inhibition is at least one source responsible
for the observed interdependence of temporal structure of a sound and
spatial cues.
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