COMPARISON OF NOISE AND TONE AZIMUTH TUNING OF NEURONS IN CAT PRIMARYAUDITORY-CORTEX AND MEDIAL GENICULATE-BODY

Citation
Jc. Clarey et al., COMPARISON OF NOISE AND TONE AZIMUTH TUNING OF NEURONS IN CAT PRIMARYAUDITORY-CORTEX AND MEDIAL GENICULATE-BODY, Journal of neurophysiology, 74(3), 1995, pp. 961-980
Citations number
62
Categorie Soggetti
Neurosciences,Physiology,Neurosciences,Physiology
Journal title
ISSN journal
00223077
Volume
74
Issue
3
Year of publication
1995
Pages
961 - 980
Database
ISI
SICI code
0022-3077(1995)74:3<961:CONATA>2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
1. A comparison of the azimuth tuning of single neurons to broadband n oise and to best frequency (BF) tone bursts was made in primary audito ry cortex (AI: n = 173) and the medial geniculate body (MGB: n = 52) o f barbiturate-anesthetized cats. Observations were largely restricted to cells located within the tonotopically organized divisions of the M GB (i.e., the ventral nucleus and the lateral division of the posterio r nuclear group) and the middle layers of AT. All cells studied had BF s greater than or equal to 4 kHz. 2. The responses of each cell to sou nds presented from seven frontal azimuthal locations (-90 to +90 degre es in 30 degrees steps; 0 degrees elevation) and at five sound pressur e levels (SPLs: 0-80 dB or 5-85 dB in 20-dB steps) provided an azimuth -level data set. Responses were averaged over SPL to obtain an azimuth function, and a number of features of this function were used to desc ribe azimuth tuning to noise and to tone stimulation. Azimuth function modulation was used to assess azimuth sensitivity, and cells were cat egorized as sensitive or insensitive depending on whether modulation w as greater than or equal to 75% or <75% of maximum, respectively. The majority (88%) of cells in the sample were azimuth sensitive to noise stimulation, and statistical analyses were restricted to these cells, which are presumably best suited to encode sound source azimuth. Azimu th selectivity was assessed by a preferred azimuth range (PAR) over wh ich azimuth function values exceeded 75% (PAR(75)) or 50% of maximum r esponse. Cells were categorized according to the location and extent o f their noise PARs. Unbounded cells had laterally located PARs that ex tended to the lateral pole (+/-90 degrees); bounded cells had PARs tha t were contained entirely within the frontal hemifield, and a subset o f these had PARs centered on the midline (+/-15 degrees). A final grou p of cells exhibited multipeaked azimuth functions to noise stimulatio n. 3. Azimuth functions to noise were generally more selective and/or more sensitive than those to tones. Statistical analyses showed that t hese differences were significant for cells in each azimuth function c ategory, and for the thalamic and cortical samples. With the exception of multipeaked cells, responsiveness to noise was significantly lower than that to tones in all categories, and for the thalamic and cortic al samples. The slope of the azimuth function, defined by the range of azimuths over which the cell's response changed from 25 to 75% of max imum, tended to be steeper to noise than that to tones; this differenc e was significant in the midline and unbounded cell groups. The majori ty of cells (89.5%) showed best azimuths (midpoint of the PAR(75)) to the two stimuli that differed by less than or equal to 30 degrees. Thi s indicates that although many cells were more narrowly tuned to the a zimuth of noise than BF tones, they tended to have similarly located n oise and tone PARs. 4. Azimuth-level data sets were averaged over azim uth to obtain a level function. The nonmonotonic strength of the level function was defined by the percentage reduction in responsiveness at the highest level tested. The effect of bandwidth on azimuth selectiv ity was slightly greater for neurons that showed strongly nonmonotonic level functions than for those with weakly nonmonotonic functions. Th ere was no relationship between the nonmonotonic strength of the respo nse to noise stimulation and differences observed in azimuth function modulation to the two stimuli. 5. Fifty cells were studied with revers ible ear occlusion to obtain information on their binaural inputs and interactions, and this was related to differences in their azimuth tun ing to noise and to tones. Cells were classified according to whether their azimuth tuning depended on monaural spectral cues [monaural dire ctional (MD) cells] or binaural disparities [binaural directional (ED) cells]. Six MD cells received excitatory input from one ear with no e vidence of input from the other (MD-EO), and these cells showed far br oader and less modulated azimuth functions to tones than to noise. The ir azimuth tuning was apparently derived from spectral cues present in broadband but not tonal stimuli. MD cells that received inhibitory in put from the nonexcitatory ear (n = 11) showed the same trends as for MD-EO cells, although differences were less dramatic because the inhib itory input shaped the cell's response to tones. 6. The azimuth tuning of 18 cells that responded maximally to azimuths about the midline wa s found to be a product of binaural facilitation. The other class of E D cells (n = 15) received excitatory input from one ear (usually the c ontralateral ear) and inhibitory input (or mixed inhibitory-facilitato ry input) from the other. These cells typically responded well through out most or all of one lateral hemifield. A substantial proportion of cells within both groups showed greater selectivity and/or sensitivity to noise than to tones, although the differences between azimuth tuni ng to the two stimuli were less dramatic than those observed in either group of MD cells. These data suggest that some aspect of a broadband stimulus also contributes to azimuth tuning in binaural cells. 7. The consistency in azimuth preference and the narrower tuning observed in many cells' responses to noise compared with high-frequency pure tone s is compatible with behavioral studies in cats, monkeys, and humans t hat have shown that both these stimuli can be localized in the horizon tal plane but that performance is more accurate to noise than to tones .