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J Neurophysiol 99: 1616-1627, 2008. First published January 23, 2008; doi:10.1152/jn.01172.2007
0022-3077/08 $8.00
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Level Dependence of Contextual Modulation in Auditory Cortex

Ben Scholl, Xiang Gao and Michael Wehr

Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon

Submitted 22 October 2007; accepted in final form 23 January 2008

Responses of cortical neurons to sensory stimuli within their receptive fields can be profoundly altered by the stimulus context. In visual and somatosensory cortex, contextual interactions have been shown to change sign from facilitation to suppression depending on stimulus strength. Contextual modulation of high-contrast stimuli tends to be suppressive, but for low-contrast stimuli tends to be facilitative. This trade-off may optimize contextual integration by cortical cells and has been suggested to be a general feature of cortical processing, but it remains unknown whether a similar phenomenon occurs in auditory cortex. Here we used whole cell and single-unit recordings to investigate how contextual interactions in auditory cortical neurons depend on the relative intensity of masker and probe stimuli in a two-tone stimulus paradigm. We tested the hypothesis that relatively low-level probes should show facilitation, whereas relatively high-level probes should show suppression. We found that contextual interactions were primarily suppressive across all probe levels, and that relatively low-level probes were subject to stronger suppression than high-level probes. These results were virtually identical for spiking and subthreshold responses. This suggests that, unlike visual cortical neurons, auditory cortical neurons show maximal suppression rather than facilitation for relatively weak stimuli.


Address for reprint requests and other correspondence: M. Wehr, Institute of Neuroscience, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403 (E-mail: wehr{at}uoregon.edu)




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