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J Neurophysiol (April 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00627.2002
Submitted on Submitted 31 July 2002; accepted in final form 6 December 2002
Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland 21205
Eliades, Steven J. and
Xiaoqin Wang.
Sensory-Motor Interaction in the Primate Auditory Cortex
During Self-Initiated Vocalizations. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 2194-2207, 2003. Little is known about
sensory-motor interaction in the auditory cortex of primates at the
level of single neurons and its role in supporting vocal communication.
The present study investigated single-unit activities in the auditory
cortex of a vocal primate, the common marmoset (Callithrix
jacchus), during self-initiated vocalizations. We found that
1) self-initiated vocalizations resulted in suppression of
neural discharges in a majority of auditory cortical neurons. The
vocalization-induced inhibition suppressed both spontaneous and
stimulus-driven discharges. Suppressed units responded poorly to
external acoustic stimuli during vocalization. 2)
Vocalization-induced suppression began several hundred milliseconds prior to the onset of vocalization. 3) The suppression of
cortical discharges reduced neural firings to below the rates expected from a unit's rate-level function, adjusted for known subcortical attenuation, and therefore was likely not entirely caused by
subcortical attenuation mechanisms. 4) A smaller population
of auditory cortical neurons showed increased discharges during
self-initiated vocalizations. This vocalization-related excitation
began after the onset of vocalization and is likely the result of
acoustic feedback. Units showing this excitation responded nearly
normally to external stimuli during vocalization. Based on these
findings, we propose that the suppression of auditory cortical neurons,
possibly originating from cortical vocal production centers, acts to
increase the dynamic range of cortical responses to vocalization
feedback for self monitoring. The excitatory responses, on the other
hand, likely play a role in maintaining hearing sensitivity to the
external acoustic environment during vocalization.
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