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J Neurophysiol (May 1, 2003). 10.1152/jn.00640.2002
Submitted on Submitted 6 August 2002; accepted in final form 31 December 2002
Department of Molecular and Integrative Physiology, Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas 66160-7401
Poirier, Pierre,
Frank K. Samson, and
Thomas J. Imig.
Spectral Shape Sensitivity Contributes to the Azimuth Tuning of
Neurons in the Cat's Inferior Colliculus. J. Neurophysiol. 89: 2760-2777, 2003. We recorded
high-best-frequency single-unit responses to free-field noise bursts
that varied in intensity and azimuth to determine whether inferior
colliculus (IC) neurons derive directionality from monaural
spectral-shape. Sixty-nine percent of the sample was directional (much
more responsive at some azimuths than others). One hundred twenty-nine
directional units were recorded under monaural conditions (unilateral
ear plugging). Binaural directional (BD) cells showed weak monaural
directionality. Monaural directional (MD) cells showed strong monaural
directionality, i.e., were much more responsive at some directions than
others. Some MD cells were sensitive to both monaural and binaural
directional cues. MD cells were monaurally nondirectional in response
to tone bursts that lack direction-dependent variation in spectral
shape. MD cells were unresponsive to noise bursts at certain azimuths
even at high intensities showing that particular spectral shapes
inhibit their responses. Two-tone inhibition was stronger where MD
cells were unresponsive to noise stimulation than at directions where they were responsive. According to the side-band inhibition model, MD
cells derive monaural directionality by comparing energy in excitatory
and inhibitory frequency domains and thus should have stronger
inhibitory side-bands than BD cells. MD and BD cells showed differences
in breadth of excitatory frequency domains, strength of nonmonotonic
level tuning, and responsiveness to tones and noise that were
consistent with this prediction. Comparison of these data with previous
findings shows that strength of spectral inhibition increases greatly
between the level of the cochlear nucleus and the IC, and there is
relatively little change in strength of spectral inhibition among the
IC, auditory thalamus, and cortex.
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