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J Neurophysiol (February 21, 2007). doi:10.1152/jn.01162.2006
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Submitted on October 31, 2006
Accepted on February 13, 2007

Preservation of spectrotemporal tuning between the nucleus laminaris and the inferior colliculus of the barn owl

Gestur Bjorn Christianson1* and Jose Luis Pena2

1 Ear Institute, University College, London, London, United Kingdom
2 Neuroscience, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, New York, United States

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: g.christianson{at}ucl.ac.uk.

Performing sound recognition is a task that requires an encoding of the time-varying spectral structure of the auditory stimulus. Similarly, the computation of the interaural time difference (ITD) requires knowledge of the precise timing of the stimulus. Consistent with this, low-level nuclei of birds and mammals implicated in ITD processing encode the ongoing phase of a stimulus. However, the brain areas that follow the binaural convergence for the computation of ITD show a reduced capacity for phase locking. In addition, we have shown that in the barn owl there is a pooling of ITD-responsive neurons to improve the reliability of ITD coding. Here we demonstrate that despite two stages of convergence and an effective loss of phase information, the auditory system of the anesthetized barn owl displays a graceful transition to an envelope coding that preserves the spectrotemporal information throughout the ITD pathway to the neurons of the core of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus.




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B. J. Fischer, G. B. Christianson, and J. L. Pena
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B. J. Fischer and M. Konishi
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