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The Journal of Neurophysiology Vol. 88 No. 2 August 2002, pp. 666-675
Copyright ©2002 by the American Physiological Society
1 Department of Anatomy, University of Mississippi Medical Center, Jackson, Mississippi 39216-4505; and 2Department of Otolaryngology/Head and Neck Surgery, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina 27599-7070
Batra, Ranjan and
Douglas C. Fitzpatrick.
Processing of Interaural Temporal Disparities in the Medial
Division of the Ventral Nucleus of the Lateral Lemniscus. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 666-675, 2002. The medial division of the ventral nucleus of the lateral
lemniscus (VNLLm) contains a specialized population of neurons that is
sensitive to interaural temporal disparities (ITDs), a potent cue for
sound localization along the azimuth. Unlike many ITD-sensitive neurons
elsewhere in the auditory system, neurons in the VNLLm respond only at
the onset of tones. An onset response may be significant for behavior
because, under echoic conditions, tones require sharp onsets for
accurate localization. In contrast, noise can generally be localized
even with gradual onsets, presumably because transients occur at random
intervals in noise. We recorded responses of neurons in the VNLLm to
tones and noise in unanesthetized rabbits. We found that although tones
elicited a transient response, noise elicited a sustained response as
if it was a sequence of transients. The responses to tones indicate
that these neurons represent a secondary stage in the processing of
ITDs. The onset response to tones was only weakly synchronized to the
phase of the tone, indicating that neurons in the VNLLm inherit their
sensitivity to ITDs from their inputs. The latencies were short (~8
ms), implying that the ITD sensitivity is derived from ascending
inputs. Most neurons in the VNLLm discharged maximally at the same ITD
at all frequencies, a characteristic shared with neurons of the medial superior olive. However, the latency of neurons in the VNLLm to interaurally delayed stimuli is linked strongly to the timing of the
contralateral stimulus. This suggests that these neurons receive a
suprathreshold, contralateral input that is modulated by a subthreshold
input conveying information about ITDs. Other stations in the auditory
pathway contain a subset of neurons that respond transiently to tones
and are sensitive to ITDs. These neurons may represent a novel pathway
that assists in localizing sounds in the presence of reflections.
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