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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 1 July 2002, pp. 172-187
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester 14642-8603; and 2Department of Brain and Cognitive Sciences, College of Arts, Sciences and Engineering, University of Rochester, Rochester, New York 14627
O'Neill, William E. and
W. Owen Brimijoin.
Directional Selectivity for FM Sweeps in the Suprageniculate
Nucleus of the Mustached Bat Medial Geniculate Body. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 172-187, 2002. Mustached bats emit
echolocation and communication calls containing both constant frequency
(CF) and frequency-modulated (FM) components. Previously we found that
86% of neurons in the ventral division of the external nucleus of the
inferior colliculus (ICXv) were directionally selective for linear FM
sweeps and that selectivity was dependent on sweep rate. The ICXv
projects to the suprageniculate nucleus (Sg) of the medial geniculate
body. In this study, we isolated 37 single units in the Sg and measured
their responses to best excitatory frequency (BEF) tones and linear
12-kHz upward and downward FM sweeps centered on the BEF. Sweeps were
presented at durations of 30, 12, and 4 ms, yielding modulation rates
of 400, 1,000, and 3,000 kHz/s. Spike count versus level functions were
obtained at each modulation rate and compared with BEF controls. Sg
units responded well to both tones and FM sweeps. BEFs clustered at 58 kHz, corresponding to the dominant CF component of the sonar signal.
Spike count functions for both tones and sweeps were predominantly non-monotonic. FM directional selectivity was significant in 53-78% of the units, depending on modulation rate and level. Units were classified as up-selective (52%), down-selective
(24%), or bi-directional (non-selective, 16%);
a few units (8%) showed preferences that were either rate-
or level-dependent. Most units showed consistent directional
preferences at all SPLs and modulation rates tested, but typically
showed stronger selectivity at lower sweep rates. Directional
preferences were attributable to suppression of activity by sweeps in
the non-preferred direction (~80% of units) and/or facilitation by
sweeps in the preferred direction (~20-30%). Latencies for BEF
tones ranged from 4.9 to 25.7 ms. Latencies for FM sweeps typically
varied linearly with sweep duration. Most FM latency-duration functions
had slopes ranging from 0.4 to 0.6, suggesting that the responses were
triggered by the BEF. Latencies for BEF tones and FM sweeps were
significantly correlated in most Sg units, i.e., the response to FM was
temporally related to the occurrence of the BEF in the FM sweep. FM
latency declined relative to BEF latency as modulation rate increased,
suggesting that at higher rates response is triggered by frequencies in
the sweep preceding the BEF. We conclude that Sg and ICXv units have
similar, though not identical, response properties. Sg units are
predominantly upsweep selective and could respond to either or both the
CF and FM components in biosonar signals in a number of echolocation scenarios, as well as to a variety of communication sounds.
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