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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 85 No. 3 March 2001, pp. 1206-1219
Copyright ©2001 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Physiology, Centre for the Neural Basis of Hearing, Cambridge CB2 3EG, United Kingdom
Wiegrebe, Lutz and
Ian M. Winter.
Temporal Representation of Iterated Rippled Noise as a Function
of Delay and Sound Level in the Ventral Cochlear Nucleus. J. Neurophysiol. 85: 1206-1219, 2001. The
discharge patterns of single units in the ventral cochlear nucleus
(VCN) of anesthetized guinea pigs were examined in response to iterated
rippled noise (IRN) as a function of the IRN delay (which determines
the IRN pitch) and the IRN sound level. Delays were varied over five
octaves in half-octave steps, and sound levels were varied over a 30- or 50-dB range in steps of 5 dB. Neural responses were analyzed in
terms of first-order and all-order inter-spike intervals (ISIs). The
IRN quasi-periodicity was preserved in the all-order ISIs
for most units independent of unit type or best frequency (BF). A
deterioration of the temporal all-order code was found, however, when
the neural response was influenced by inhibition. The IRN
quasi-periodicity was also preserved in first-order ISIs for
a limited range of IRN delays and levels. Sustained Chopper units (CS)
in the VCN responded with very regular ISIs when the IRN delay
corresponded to the unit's chopping period; i.e., the unit showed an
increased proportion of intervals corresponding to the IRN delay
(interval enhancement) relative to an equal-level, white-noise
stimulation. This interval enhancement has a band-pass characteristic
with a peak corresponding to the chopping period. Moreover, for CS
units in rate saturation, the chopping period, and thus the interval
enhancement to the IRN, did not vary with level. Units classified as
onset-chopper also show a band-pass interval enhancement to the IRN
stimuli; however, they show more level-dependent changes than CS units.
Primary-like (PL) units also show level-dependent changes in their
ability to code the IRN pitch in first-order intervals. The range of
delays where PL units showed interval enhancement was broader and
extended to shorter delays. Based on these findings, it is suggested
that CS units may play an important role in pitch processing in that they transform a higher-order interval code into a first-order interval
place code. Their limited dynamic range together with the preservation
of the temporal stimulus features in saturation may serve as a
physiological basis for the perceived level independence of pitch.
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