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Division of Biology, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, California
Submitted 12 March 2008; accepted in final form 27 May 2008
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ABSTRACT |
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INTRODUCTION |
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Noise reduction in spike count ITD tuning curves, relative to coincidence detector responses, is observed in the core of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICcc), suggesting that ICcc neurons pool over the responses of multiple coincidence detector neurons (Christianson and Peña 2006
). ICcc receives input from NL (Takahashi and Konishi 1988a
) and the anterior part of the dorsal lateral lemniscal nucleus [LLDa, previously known as nucleus ventralis lemnisci lateralis, pars anterior, or VLVa (Wild et al. 2001
)] (Adolphs 1993
), which also receives input from the contralateral NL (Takahashi and Konishi 1988b
). It is unclear what role LLDa plays in transforming spike count responses to ITD within the owl's localization pathway because the variability of single neuron responses to ITD has not been described. It is therefore an open question whether noise reduction of coincidence detector responses to ITD occurs in LLDa.
To determine whether noise reduction of ITD tuning occurs in LLDa, and to compare the spike count responses to ITD of single neurons in NL, LLDa, and ICcc, we recorded extracellularly the responses of LLDa neurons to ITD and compared the responses to those measured for NL and ICcc neurons by Christianson and Peña (2006)
.
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METHODS |
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Surgery
Owls were anesthetized with intramuscular injections of ketamine (20 mg/kg; Ketaject; Phoenix Pharmaceuticals, St. Joseph, MO) and xylazine (2 mg/kg; Xyla-Ject; Phoenix Pharmaceuticals). Owls were also given an intramuscular injection of antibiotics (oxytetracycline, 20 mg; maxim-200; Phoenix Pharmaceuticals) and a subcutaneous injection of lactated Ringer solution (B. Braun Medical, Irvine, CA) at the beginning of each session. Subsequent injections of ketamine and xylazine were given as needed to maintain an adequate level of anesthesia (approximately every 2 h). The owl was restrained with a soft leather jacket and covered with a water-based heating pad (k-20-f; American Medical Systems, Cincinnati, OH) to maintain the body temperature. In the initial experiment, a head plate and zero post were fixed to the owl's skull to facilitate stereotaxic localization of the recording area. The head plate holds the owl's head with the beak rotated 30° below horizontal in the sagittal plane (Arthur 2004
). A craniotomy was made to expose the area between 1 and 3 mm lateral to the zero post. At each recording session, the dura was incised and reflected with a hypodermic needle, and an electrode was lowered to the desired depth. At the end of the recording session, the opening in the skull was filled with dental cement and the wound was sutured. The owl remained isolated in a heated cage overnight.
Acoustic stimuli
Custom software was used to generate sound stimuli (Arthur 2004
). Stimuli consisted of broadband noise and tones 100 ms in duration with 5-ms linear rise and fall ramps. Broadband noise stimuli had a passband of 0.5–12 kHz. Stimulus ITD was varied in steps of 30 µs and frequency in steps of 500 Hz.
All recordings took place in a double-walled sound-attenuating chamber (Industrial Acoustics, Bronx, NY). Acoustic stimuli were delivered by a stereo analog interface (DD1; Tucker Davis Technologies, Alachua, FL) through a calibrated earphone assembly. Each earphone consisted of a transducer (Knowles 1914; Knowles, Itasca, IL) and a microphone (Knowles 1319) encased in a custom-made metal delivery piece that fits in the owl's ear canal. Gaps between the earphone assembly and the ear canal were filled with silicon impression material (gold Velvet II; All American Mold Laboratories, Oklahoma City, OK). The microphone was used to measure the transducer's frequency response. The inverse of the transducer's frequency response was then applied to outgoing stimuli (Arthur 2004
).
Data collection
Extracellular recordings of single LLDa neurons were made with tungsten electrodes (1 M
, 0.005-in; A-M Systems, Carlsborg, WA). Neurons were considered isolated based on the presence of a refractory period in the interspike interval histogram and the similarity of spike shape.
The data for this study consist of spike counts in response to sound stimuli with fixed ITD and, for tones, frequency. The following protocol was employed once a neuron was isolated. The spike count response to ITD values between ±250 µs (positive corresponds to right ear leading and negative corresponds to left ear leading) of a broadband noise stimulus was collected at a stimulus level that was 15–20 dB above threshold. The average spike count response over trials to ITD values between ±250 µs is called the ITD tuning curve. Also the response to the frequency of a tonal stimulus at a fixed stimulus intensity was collected at the best ITD at a stimulus level that was 15–20 dB above threshold. The average spike count response over trials to stimulus frequency at a fixed stimulus intensity is called the isointensity frequency tuning curve. If possible, the response of the neuron to a larger range of ITD values, ±2,100 µs, was collected using broadband noise stimuli. The average spike count response over trials to the larger range of ITD is called the long-range ITD tuning curve. ITD tuning curves and isointensity frequency tuning curves were obtained with randomized sequences of ITD and frequency, respectively. Spike counts were averaged over 5–10 repetitions for each parameter value.
Data analysis
FREQUENCY TUNING. The best frequency is the frequency that elicits the maximum spike count in the isointensity frequency tuning curve.
TRIAL-TO-TRIAL VARIABILITY OF ITD TUNING CURVES.
We examined the convergence of ITD tuning curves obtained using 1–9 trials to the 10-trial average for neurons where 10 trials were collected for each ITD value. The similarity between the tuning curve obtained with 10 trials, denoted r10, and the tuning curve obtained using a randomly selected set of n trials, denoted rn, is given by the correlation coefficient of the responses (Christianson and Peña 2006
)
![]() | (1) |
n is the average response of the n-trial tuning curve over all ITDs, and N is the number of ITD values used to compute the ITD tuning curve. We computed the average value of Corr(r10,rn) over multiple instances of n randomly selected trials. We quantified the regularity of spike count responses to ITD using the Fano factor. The Fano factor for each ITD was computed as the ratio of the sample variance of the spike count to the sample mean of the spike count.
ITD TUNING CURVE SHAPE. The trough firing rate is the minimum value of the sinusoid-shaped ITD tuning curve expressed in spikes per second.
ITD tuning curves of neurons in the barn owl's interaural time difference pathway show varying degrees of rectification (Christianson and Peña 2006
). Rectification of long-range ITD tuning curves was quantified by the rectification index (RI), which measures the symmetry of the tuning curve about the mean value of the curve at large ITDs (Christianson and Peña 2006
). The rectification index is the average of the responses to the 15 most negative ITDs (less than –1,000 µs) and the 15 most positive ITDs (>1,000 µs) of the long-range ITD curve after normalization to have values between 0 and 1, denoted R10, yielding
![]() | (2) |
The peak-trough difference is the difference between the maximum and minimum values of the ITD tuning curve expressed in spikes per second.
The half-height width of the ITD tuning curve is the width of the peak in the tuning curve at half the distance between the minimum and maximum responses. If one flank of the tuning curve remains above the half-maximum height over the range of ITD values used, then the tuning curve half-height width is undefined. The half-height width is expressed as a percent of period by multiplying the ITD range by the neuron's best frequency.
FISHER INFORMATION.
We investigated the accuracy of ITD estimation from spike count responses of single neurons using the Fisher information. The Fisher information (FI) for a single neuron is defined as a function of stimulus ITD as
![]() | (3) |
denotes ITD. The probability distribution over spike counts given the stimulus ITD, P(r|
), was estimated by convolving the histogram of spike count responses with a Gaussian-shaped filter having SDs of 0.5 spikes and 15 µs and then normalizing each column to sum to one (Dean et al. 2005
ESTIMATING THE NUMBER OF CONVERGING NL NEURONS IN LLDA.
We estimated the number of NL neurons converging on an LLDa neuron by assuming that LLDa responses are a linear combination of n NL inputs. The linearity assumption is supported by the similarity of ITD tuning curve shapes in NL and LLDa (see RESULTS). Specifically, we assume that the spike count response of an LLDa neuron, denoted rLLDa, can be written in terms of NL responses as
where the constants g and b reflect the differences in peak and trough firing rates of NL and LLDa neurons. We also assume, for computational convenience, that all NL pairs have the same spike count correlation coefficient
. While there are no data available to constrain the spike count correlation coefficient, we assume that LLDa neurons pool NL neurons with the same best frequency and best ITD, and therefore it is reasonable to assume that the spike count correlation coefficient does not vary greatly among pairs in this small population. Under this model, the variance of the LLDa spike count response, denoted
LLDa2, can be written in terms of the average NL spike count variance, denoted 
NL,i2
, and the average NL spike count covariance, denoted 

NL,i,
NL,j
, as
![]() | (4) |
(see APPENDIX). Therefore the number of converging inputs is found by solving this equation for n, yielding
![]() | (5) |
<
LLDa2/(g2
NL,i
NL,j
). If the NL inputs are matched in best frequency and best ITD, then the constant g that produces the desired peak-trough difference in LLDa is given by the ratio of the peak-trough difference of the LLDa neuron to the average of the NL peak-trough differences, yielding
The value of b does not factor into the calculation of the number of converging NL neurons and is left as a free parameter that determines the LLDa neuron's trough firing rate. Histology
To verify recording sites, iontophoretic injections of 10,000 molecular-weight (MW) biotinylated dextran amine (BDA) (Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR) [10% in 25 mM phosphate buffer (PB), pH 7.5] were made in LLDa in two owls and iontophoretic injection of Alexa Fluor 488-dextran amine (Molecular Probes) (10,000 MW in a 10% solution of PB) was made in LLDa in one owl (Akutagawa and Konishi 2005
). The tracers were iontophoresed with positive-current 5-µA pulses (7 s on/7 s off) for 10 min through a glass pipette (15 µm diam). Survival times varied from 6 to 9 days. Animals were given a lethal dose of pentobarbital (Abbott, Abbott Park, IL) and perfused through the left ventricle of the heart with 0.9% NaCl until clearing, followed by 1 h of 2% paraformaldehyde (PF) in 25 mM PB. After 1 day of postfixing at 4°C, the brains were cryoprotected by immersing them in a solution of 30% sucrose in 2% PF in PB for 2 days (4°C). The brains were cut on a freezing microtome (30 µm), and the sections were serially collected in cold PB. Fluorescent-labeled sections were mounted as soon as possible from PB onto precleaned slides, dried for 30 min in the dark, and coverslipped with Vectashield (Vector Laboratories, Burlingame, CA). Brain sections with BDA microinjections were similarly cut and collected in PB. After a 15-min wash in PB, the sections were incubated in the ABC Elite kit (Vector Laboratories) for 1 h at room temperature, followed by three washes in PB with 0.1% Triton X-100 (TX; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) for 15 min each. The reaction product was visualized by incubating the sections in 0.02% 3–3'-diaminobenzidine tetrahydrochloride (Sigma) and 0.009% hydrogen peroxide in PB with or without cobalt chloride intensification. The sections were washed twice for 15 min in PB, mounted onto subbed slides, and dried. The slides were coverslipped unstained in Permount (Sigma).
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RESULTS |
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Spike count responses to ITD in LLDa showed little trial-to-trial variability. For most LLDa neurons, the ITD tuning curves obtained in single trials resemble the 10-trial average tuning curve (Figs. 2B and 3). We quantified the similarity between the ITD tuning curve obtained using n trials, denoted rn, and the ITD tuning curve obtained using ten trials, denoted r10, using the correlation coefficient of rn and r10 (see METHODS). Consistent with the similarity between r1 and r10 seen in Fig. 2B, there is a very high median correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 in LLDa [median: 0.94; interquartile range (IQR): 0.86–0.97; Fig. 3A]. A similarly high correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 was observed in ICcc [ICcc, 23 neurons; median: 0.96; IQR: 0.93–0.98; LLDa and ICcc medians not significantly different by Kruskal-Wallis (KW), P > 0.15] (Christianson and Peña 2006
). The median correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 is significantly larger in both LLDa and ICcc than in NL (NL, 24 neurons; median: 0.76; IQR: 0.68–0.81; NL and LLDa medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–7; NL and ICcc medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–7). The value of the correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 was robust to selection of the trial used to compute r1 as quantified by the ratio of the mean value of the correlation coefficient over trials to the SD of the correlation coefficient over trials (LLDa, median: 32.81; NL, 24 neurons; median: 7.25; ICcc, 23 neurons; median: 38.35) (Christianson and Peña 2006
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We also computed the spike count SD to determine its contribution to differences in the Fano factor among NL, LLDa, and ICcc. The ITD-averaged spike count SD is similar in LLDa and ICcc (LLDa; median: 1.4 spikes/stimulus; IQR: 1.2–1.7 spikes/stimulus; ICcc, 23 neurons; median: 1.4 spikes/stimulus; IQR: 1.0–1.8 spikes/stimulus; LLDa and ICcc medians not significantly different by KW, P > 0.55; Fig. 3C). The ITD-averaged spike count SD is larger in NL than in both LLDa and ICcc (NL, 29 neurons; median: 2.1 spikes/stimulus; IQR: 1.9–2.7 spikes/stimulus; NL and LLDa medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–5; NL and ICcc medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–4).
The degree of trial-to-trial variability in ITD tuning displayed by NL, LLDa, and ICcc neurons was weakly correlated with both the neuron's best frequency and the neuron's best ITD. Best frequencies ranged from 1.9 to 6.1 kHz [3.63 ± 1.17 (SD) kHz] in LLDa, from 0.7 to 6.5 kHz (4.09 ± 1.36 kHz) in NL, and from 1.1 to 6.6 kHz (4.03 ± 1.65 kHz) in ICcc. Weak correlation was observed between the best frequency and 1) the correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 (LLDa, r = –0.53; NL, r = 0.03; ICcc, r = –0.41), 2) the ITD-averaged Fano factor (LLDa, r = 0.02; NL, r = 0.01; ICcc, r = –0.06), and 3) the ITD-averaged spike count SD (LLDa, r = 0.36; NL, r = –0.49; ICcc, r = –0.24). Best ITDs for NL, LLDa, and ICcc neurons were largely within the physiological range of ITDs, ±250 µs (Keller et al. 1998
; Poganiatz et al. 2001
) (LLDa, –210–270 µs; NL, –240–240 µs; ICcc, –210–200 µs). Weak correlation was observed between the absolute value of the best ITD and 1) the correlation coefficient of r1 and r10 (LLDa, r = 0.14; NL, r = 0.05; ICcc, r = 0.02), 2) the ITD-averaged Fano factor (LLDa, r = 0.12; NL, r = –0.23; ICcc, r = 0.36), and 3) the ITD-averaged spike count SD (LLDa, r = –0.13; NL, r = 0.21; ICcc, r = –0.28).
ITD tuning curve shape
The accuracy of ITD estimation from spike count responses of single neurons depends on the probability distribution of responses for each ITD, which encompasses not only the variability in the response to ITD but also the shape of the ITD curve (Dayan and Abbott 2001
). Therefore we characterized ITD tuning curve shapes by quantifying tuning curve rectification, peak-trough differences, and tuning curve widths.
Rectification of ITD tuning curves
Consistent with previous descriptions, most NL and LLDa neurons have ITD tuning curves with troughs lying above 0 spikes/s, whereas most ICcc neurons have ITD tuning curves with large troughs where zero spikes are produced (Christianson and Peña 2006
; Fujita and Konishi 1991
; Moiseff and Konishi 1983
) (Figs. 2, 4, and 5A). Consequently, ITD tuning curves in NL and LLDa appear symmetrical about their mean value, but ITD tuning curves in ICcc are asymmetrical, resembling a rectification of the curves seen in NL and LLDa. For quantitative comparison of tuning curve rectification in NL, LLDa, and ICcc neurons, we computed the trough firing rate and the rectification index (Fig. 5, A and B, see METHODS). The firing rate at the trough of the ITD tuning curve is above 0 spikes/s for most NL and LLDa neurons but is equal to 0 spikes/s for most ICcc neurons (LLDa, median: 60 spikes/s; IQR: 40–79.8 spikes/s; NL, median: 60 spikes/s; IQR: 22.3–114.9 spikes/s; LLDa and NL medians not significantly different by KW, P > 0.6; ICcc, median: 0 spikes/s; IQR: 0–3.8 spikes/s; ICcc and LLDa medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–6; ICcc and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–8; Fig. 5A). The rectification index measures symmetry of the ITD tuning curve and takes a value of 0.5 for a symmetrical curve and a value <0.5 for curves that are rectified. The rectification index shows that ITD tuning curves in NL and LLDa do not display rectification, but ITD tuning curves in ICcc are rectified (LLDa, 15 neurons; median: 0.53; IQR 0.44–0.58; NL, 82 neurons; median: 0.48; IQR: 0.42–0.54; LLDa and NL medians not significantly different by KW, P > 0.17; ICcc, median: 0.32; IQR: 0.26–0.49; ICcc and LLDa medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–3; ICcc and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–4; Fig. 5B).
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The peak-trough difference of ITD tuning curves is larger in ICcc than in NL and LLDa (Christianson and Peña 2006
; Fujita and Konishi 1991
). The median peak-trough difference in LLDa of 113 spikes/s is significantly larger than the median value of 63 spikes/s observed in NL and smaller, but not significantly, than the median value of 141.5 spikes/s observed in ICcc (LLDa, IQR: 74.5–146.8; NL, 31 neurons; IQR: 50.9–94.1; LLDa and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–2; ICcc, 28 neurons; IQR: 82–184.8; LLDa and ICcc medians not significantly different by KW, P > 0.1; ICcc and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–3; Fig. 5C).
Tuning widths
The half-height width of ITD tuning curves in NL and LLDa is near the half-period predicted by sinusoidal tuning, but is less than one half-period in ICcc (Fig. 5D) (Fujita and Konishi 1991
). The median half-height width of ITD tuning curves in LLDa expressed as a percent of period is 51.8%, which is consistent with sinusoidal tuning (17 neurons, IQR: 49.0–58.8%). Similar to responses in LLDa, the median half-height width of ITD tuning curves in NL is 51.6% (61 neurons; IQR: 46.7–56.8%; NL and LLDa medians not significantly different by KW, P > 0.4). The median half-height width of ITD tuning curves in ICcc is 38.0%, indicating sharper tuning than sinusoidal (22 neurons; IQR: 31.4–47.4%; ICcc and LLDa medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–4; ICcc and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–6).
Fisher information
The accuracy of ITD estimation from spike count responses of single neurons is greater in both LLDa and ICcc than in NL as quantified by the Fisher information. The inverse of the Fisher information describes how well ITD can be estimated from a neuron's response by providing a lower bound on the mean square error of an unbiased estimate derived from the neural response (Dayan and Abbott 2001
). Fisher information is maximal at points of steepest slope of the tuning curve where neurons are most sensitive to changes in ITD (Dayan and Abbott 2001
). For each neuron, we computed the maximum value of the Fisher information over stimulus ITD. The population median of the maximum Fisher information over ITD is larger in both LLDa and ICcc than in NL (Fig. 6; LLDa and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–5; ICcc and NL medians significantly different by KW, P < 10–5) (Christianson and Peña 2006
). The maximum Fisher information over ITD is not significantly different in LLDa and ICcc (KW, P > 0.3). We note that specific values of the Fisher information depend on the parameters of the smoothing filer used to estimate the response probability (see METHODS). Nevertheless, the increase in the Fisher information in both LLDa and ICcc relative to NL was robust to changes in the parameters.
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The lower variability of spike count responses to ITD in LLDa than in NL suggests that LLDa neurons pool the responses of multiple coincidence detector neurons. We estimated the degree of neural convergence required to produce the observed noise reduction under the assumption that LLDa responses are a linear combination of multiple NL responses. This assumption is supported by the similarity of ITD tuning curve shapes between NL and LLDa neurons. In particular, the results here show that both NL and LLDa neurons have near-sinusoidal ITD tuning curves with little rectification. Given the linear model, the number of converging NL neurons can be expressed in terms of the spike count variances of the NL neurons and the target LLDa neuron, the LLDa and NL peak-trough differences, and the spike count correlation coefficient of NL neurons (Eq. 5). Assuming the NL responses are uncorrelated, the median number of pooled NL neurons required to produce the LLDa spike count variance is five (IQR: 2–9.5 neurons). For each LLDa neuron, there is a maximum spike count correlation coefficient of NL responses that will allow the LLDa neuron's spike count variance to be produced from a linear combination of the NL responses (see METHODS). The median, computed over the LLDa population, of the maximum correlation coefficient between NL neurons allowable to produce the LLDa neuron's spike count variance is 0.20 (IQR: 0.11–0.61). For the 22 of 31 LLDa neurons with a maximum allowable spike count correlation coefficient between NL neurons of >0.1, the median number of pooled NL neurons, assuming an NL correlation coefficient of 0.1, required to produce the LLDa spike count variance is 3.5 (IQR: 2–11 neurons).
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DISCUSSION |
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The presence of noise reduction of NL coincidence detector responses in LLDa implies that noise reduction may be inherited in ICcc. As stated in Christianson and Peña (2006
, 2007
), noise reduction of NL coincidence detector responses in ICcc may result from a pooling of NL inputs by ICcc neurons. However, the results here suggest that pooling of NL neurons by ICcc neurons is not necessary to produce noise reduction in ICcc. We demonstrate that LLDa neurons show similar trial-to-trial variability in ITD tuning to that displayed by ICcc neurons. Given the projection of LLDa to ICcc (Adolphs 1993
), noise reduction in ICcc may be an inherited property of ITD tuning derived from LLDa. In particular, selection of the LLDa neurons with the smallest trial-to-trial variability in ITD tuning or convergence of multiple LLDa neurons in ICcc would be sufficient to produce the trial-to-trial variability in ITD tuning observed in ICcc.
It remains an open question why the owl's auditory system contains both a direct pathway from NL to ICcc (Takahashi and Konishi 1988a
) and an indirect pathway from NL to ICcc via LLDa (Adolphs 1993
; Takahashi and Konishi 1988b
). A possible explanation for the presence of both direct and indirect pathways from NL to ICcc can be drawn from the observation that NL projects contralaterally to both LLDa and ICcc (Takahashi and Konishi 1988a
,b
) and LLDa projects contralaterally to ICcc (Adolphs 1993
). This circuit configuration allows for signals derived from NL neurons on both sides of the brain to converge on single neurons in ICcc. Bilateral convergence of signals originating in NL would allow for greater noise reduction in ICcc through averaging of signals originally derived from different NL neurons. This may explain why trial-to-trial variability of ITD tuning is smaller, although not significantly, in ICcc than in LLDa (Fig. 3A). Another reason for the existence of both a direct and an indirect pathway to ICcc is to create the temporal delay required to produce motion-direction sensitivity in ICcc neurons (Wagner and Takahashi 1992
). It is unknown, however, if LLDa and NL neurons synapse on the same neurons in ICcc. It is therefore possible that there are separate pathways on a fine scale such that NL and LLDa inputs to ICcc are segregated, and thus pooling of NL neurons to reduce variability would occur twice in the owl's time pathway.
The cumulative effect of processing ITD at successive stages in the owl's localization pathway produces a population code where units accurately represent ITD and ITD-independent spikes are eliminated. Previous work on the owl's time pathway, coupled with the current results, shows that neurons in post-NL nuclei display smaller overall rates of spiking, more narrow ITD curves, and more accurate rate coding of ITD than displayed by coincidence detectors (Bala et al. 2003
; Christianson and Peña 2006
; Fujita and Konishi 1991
). We found that in NL, LLDa, and ICcc, the Fano factor was less than one, indicating greater regularity in the spike count response than that produced by a Poisson process. The Fano factor provides a complementary measure of response regularity to those assessing phase locking by looking at the regularity of the spike count without addressing the precise timing of spikes. An interesting aspect of the transformation of ITD tuning from LLDa to ICcc is that spike count responses are more regular in LLDa than in ICcc, as quantified by the Fano factor. This raises the question, what is the benefit of introducing a transformation that decreases spike count response regularity when such a decrease may lead to a decrease in the accuracy of the population code representation of ITD? One possibility is that the system is acting to increase energy efficiency while maintaining accuracy in representing ITD. Examining the spike count variance (Fig. 3C) and the trough firing rate (Fig. 5A) shows that the decrease in the Fano factor from LLDa to ICcc results from a decrease in spike number, not from a change in spike count variance. Inhibition is known to cause ITD tuning troughs to fall to zero in ICcc and, consequently, reduce the number of spikes produced at each ITD by removing the ITD-independent part of the signal that is present in LLDa responses (Fujita and Konishi 1991
). The presence of inhibition in ICcc also leads to sharper ITD tuning curves in ICcc than in LLDa (Fujita and Konishi 1991
). The sharpening of ITD tuning curves in ICcc produces a small, but not significant, increase in the Fisher information in ICcc relative to LLDa. While the elimination of the ITD-independent component of the signal in ICcc through inhibition produces a smaller Fano factor in ICcc than in LLDa, the net effect of inhibition acting on ICcc neurons is to keep approximately the same single-neuron Fisher information in ICcc and LLDa, and therefore equal estimation and detection accuracy but with fewer spikes in ICcc. The presence of inhibition that produces narrowly tuned units that fire few spikes per stimulus presentation is furthered in ICx (Fujita and Konishi 1991
; Peña and Konishi 2002
). The system may therefore be organized to provide accurate localization performance with as few spikes as possible.
In conclusion, we find that LLDa is a site of noise reduction of coincidence detector responses in the owl's localization pathway. This raises the possibility that ICcc inherits its noise reduction property from LLDa. A comparison of ITD tuning at successive stages in the owl's localization pathway suggests that processing is geared toward producing a population code where single neurons accurately represent ITD and ITD-independent spikes are eliminated.
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APPENDIX |
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where g and b are constants. Under this model, the spike count variance of the LLDa neuron is given by
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NL,i2 and employs the assumption that all NL pairs have the same spike count correlation coefficient
, equality (c) includes the averages of the spike count variance and the product of spike count SDs defined as
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GRANTS |
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: B. J. Fischer, California Institute of Technology, Div. of Biology, Mail code 216-76, 1200 E. California, Pasadena, CA 91125 (E-mail: fischerb{at}caltech.edu)
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