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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 565-578
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1Department of Surgery, Otolaryngology Division, 2Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, 3Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester, New York 14642-8629
Walton, Joseph P.,
Henry Simon, and
Robert D. Frisina.
Age-Related Alterations in the Neural Coding of Envelope
Periodicities. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 565-578, 2002. This research was guided by the working hypothesis that the
aging auditory system progressively loses its ability to process rapid
acoustic transients efficiently, and in elderly listeners, this results
in difficulties in speech perception. Neural correlates of age-related
deficits in temporal processing were investigated by recording from
inferior colliculus (IC) neurons from young adult and old CBA
mice. Single-unit responses were recorded to sinusoidally
amplitude-modulated (SAM) noise carriers, presented at 65-80 dB SPL,
having modulation frequencies (MFs) that ranged from 10 to 800 Hz.
Because phasic-type temporal response patterns dominate responses to
tone and noise in mammalian IC, we limited our analyses to only phasic
units. Modulation transfer functions (MTF) for both rate (rMTF) and
synchronization (sMTF) measures were used to derive respective best
modulation frequencies (rBMF and sBMF). The main age-related finding
was that there was an overall increase in response rate to SAM noise
carriers and a decrease in the median upper cutoff frequency in units
from old mice. At rBMF, the median spike count from units from old
animals was 1.63 times greater, and at the sBMF, the median spike count was 2.29 times greater than the young adult sample. We explored whether
the increase in driven activity was due to a change in the transient
(first cycle response) or periodic (remaining response) component of
the response to SAM noise. Median spike counts of the transient
component decreased with increasing MF for both young adult and old
units, with median counts consistently greater in the old sample as
compared with young. Median spike counts for the periodic response
remained relatively constant as a function of MF; however, there was a
significantly greater (3 times) response for older units in a
restricted range of MFs. The greater median spike counts found for the
transient and periodic response was also evident when we analyzed the
cycle-by-cycle response. The magnitude of the differences between the
young adult and the old spike median responses was greatest at low MFs
and then declined as MF increased. Finally, the young adult
distribution of rBMFs extends to higher MFs than the old, with 36.0%
of units having rBMFs >100 Hz as compared with only 12.5% of the old
unit sample. We postulate that this age-related difference in rate
coding of SAM noise carriers is consistent with a loss, or imbalance,
of excitatory and inhibitory neural mechanisms known to shape encoding of envelope periodicities in the IC.
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