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J Neurophysiol 94: 2970-2975, 2005. First published May 25, 2005; doi:10.1152/jn.00144.2005
0022-3077/05 $8.00
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Delayed Inhibition in Cortical Receptive Fields and the Discrimination of Complex Stimuli

Rajiv Narayan, Ayla Ergün and Kamal Sen

Hearing Research Center, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Center for Biodynamics and Program in Mathematical and Computational Neuroscience, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts

Submitted 10 February 2005; accepted in final form 18 May 2005

Although auditory cortex is thought to play an important role in processing complex natural sounds such as speech and animal vocalizations, the specific functional roles of cortical receptive fields (RFs) remain unclear. Here, we study the relationship between a behaviorally important function: the discrimination of natural sounds and the structure of cortical RFs. We examine this problem in the model system of songbirds, using a computational approach. First, we constructed model neurons based on the spectral temporal RF (STRF), a widely used description of auditory cortical RFs. We focused on delayed inhibitory STRFs, a class of STRFs experimentally observed in primary auditory cortex (ACx) and its analog in songbirds (field L), which consist of an excitatory subregion and a delayed inhibitory subregion cotuned to a characteristic frequency. We quantified the discrimination of birdsongs by model neurons, examining both the dynamics and temporal resolution of discrimination, using a recently proposed spike distance metric (SDM). We found that single model neurons with delayed inhibitory STRFs can discriminate accurately between songs. Discrimination improves dramatically when the temporal structure of the neural response at fine timescales is considered. When we compared discrimination by model neurons with and without the inhibitory subregion, we found that the presence of the inhibitory subregion can improve discrimination. Finally, we modeled a cortical microcircuit with delayed synaptic inhibition, a candidate mechanism underlying delayed inhibitory STRFs, and showed that blocking inhibition in this model circuit degrades discrimination.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: K. Sen, Dept. of Biomedical Engineering, Boston Univ., 44 Cummington St., Boston, MA 02215 (E-mail: kamalsen{at}bu.edu)




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