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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 87 No. 1 January 2002, pp. 72-86
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
Department of Zoology and Physiology, University of Wyoming, Laramie, Wyoming 82071
Razak, Khaleel A. and
Zoltan M. Fuzessery.
Functional Organization of the Pallid Bat Auditory Cortex:
Emphasis on Binaural Organization. J. Neurophysiol. 87: 72-86, 2002. This report maps the organization of the
primary auditory cortex of the pallid bat in terms of frequency tuning,
selectivity for behaviorally relevant sounds, and interaural intensity
difference (IID) sensitivity. The pallid bat is unusual in that it
localizes terrestrial prey by passively listening to prey-generated
noise transients (1-20 kHz), while reserving high-frequency (<30 kHz) echolocation for obstacle avoidance. The functional organization of its
auditory cortex reflects the need for specializations in echolocation
and passive sound localization. Best frequencies were arranged
tonotopically with a general increase in the caudolateral to
rostromedial direction. Frequencies between 24 and 32 kHz were under-represented, resulting in hypertrophy of frequencies relevant for
prey localization and echolocation. Most neurons (83%) tuned <30 kHz
responded preferentially to broadband or band-pass noise over single
tones. Most neurons (62%) tuned >30 kHz responded selectively or
exclusively to the 60- to 30-kHz downward frequency-modulated (FM)
sweep used for echolocation. Within the low-frequency region, neurons
were placed in two groups that occurred in two separate clusters: those
selective for low- or high-frequency band-pass noise and suppressed by
broadband noise, and neurons that showed no preference for band-pass
noise over broadband noise. Neurons were organized in homogeneous
clusters with respect to their binaural response properties. The
distribution of binaural properties differed in the noise- and FM
sweep-preferring regions, suggesting task-dependent differences in
binaural processing. The low-frequency region was dominated by a large
cluster of binaurally inhibited neurons with a smaller cluster of
neurons with mixed binaural interactions. The FM sweep-selective region
was dominated by neurons with mixed binaural interactions or monaural
neurons. Finally, this report describes a cortical substrate for
systematic representation of a spatial cue, IIDs, in the low-frequency
region. This substrate may underlie a population code for sound
localization based on a systematic shift in the distribution of
activity across the cortex with sound source location.
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