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J Neurophysiol (November 1, 2002). 10.1152/jn.00119.2002
Submitted on 19 February 2002
Accepted on 1 August 2002
Department of Biology, McGill University, Montreal, Quebec H3A 1B1, Canada
Samson, Annie-Hélène and
Gerald S. Pollack.
Encoding of Sound Localization Cues by an Identified Auditory
Interneuron: Effects of Stimulus Temporal Pattern. J. Neurophysiol. 88: 2322-2328, 2002. An important
cue for sound localization is binaural comparison of stimulus
intensity. Two features of neuronal responses, response strength, i.e.,
spike count and/or rate, and response latency, vary with stimulus
intensity, and binaural comparison of either or both might underlie
localization. Previous studies at the receptor-neuron level showed that
these response features are affected by the stimulus temporal pattern.
When sounds are repeated rapidly, as occurs in many natural sounds,
response strength decreases and latency increases, resulting in altered
coding of localization cues. In this study we analyze binaural cues for sound localization at the level of an identified pair of interneurons (the left and right AN2) in the cricket auditory system, with emphasis
on the effects of stimulus temporal pattern on binaural response
differences. AN2 spike count decreases with rapidly repeated stimulation and latency increases. Both effects depend on stimulus intensity. Because of the difference in intensity at the two ears, binaural differences in spike count and latency change as stimulation continues. The binaural difference in spike count decreases, whereas the difference in latency increases. The proportional changes in
response strength and in latency are greater at the interneuron level
than at the receptor level, suggesting that factors in addition to
decrement of receptor responses are involved. Intracellular recordings
reveal that a slowly building, long-lasting hyperpolarization is
established in AN2. At the same time, the level of depolarization reached during the excitatory postsynaptic potential (EPSP) resulting from each sound stimulus decreases. Neither these effects on membrane potential nor the changes in spiking response are accounted for by
contralateral inhibition. Based on comparison of our results with
earlier behavioral experiments, it is unlikely that crickets use the
binaural difference in latency of AN2 responses as the main cue for
determining sound direction, leaving the difference in response
strength, i.e., spike count and/or rate, as the most likely candidate.
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