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Neural Responses in the Primary Auditory Cortex of Freely Behaving Cats While Discriminating Fast and Slow Click-Trains

机译:自由行为猫的初级听觉皮层中的神经反应,同时区分快速和缓慢的点击训练

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摘要

Repeated acoustic events are ubiquitous temporal features of natural sounds. To reveal the neural representation of the sound repetition rate, a number of electrophysiological studies have been conducted on various mammals and it has been proposed that both the spike-time and firing rate of primary auditory cortex (A1) neurons encode the repetition rate. However, previous studies rarely examined how the experimental animals perceive the difference in the sound repetition rate, and a caveat to these experiments is that they compared physiological data obtained from animals with psychophysical data obtained from humans. In this study, for the first time, we directly investigated acoustic perception and the underlying neural mechanisms in the same experimental animal by examining spike activities in the A1 of free-moving cats while performing a Go/No-go task to discriminate the click-trains at different repetition rates (12.5–200 Hz). As reported by previous studies on passively listening animals, A1 neurons showed both synchronized and non-synchronized responses to the click-trains. We further found that the neural performance estimated from the precise temporal information of synchronized units was good enough to distinguish all 16.7–200 Hz from the 12.5 Hz repetition rate; however, the cats showed declining behavioral performance with the decrease of the target repetition rate, indicating an increase of difficulty in discriminating two slower click-trains. Such behavioral performance was well explained by the firing rate of some synchronized and non-synchronized units. Trial-by-trial analysis indicated that A1 activity was not affected by the cat's judgment of behavioral response. Our results suggest that the main function of A1 is to effectively represent temporal signals using both spike timing and firing rate, while the cats may read out the rate-coding information to perform the task in this experiment.
机译:重复的声音事件是自然声音的普遍时间特征。为了揭示声音重复率的神经表征,已经对各种哺乳动物进行了许多电生理学研究,并且提出初级听觉皮层(A1)神经元的突波时间和击发率均编码重复率。但是,先前的研究很少检查实验动物如何感知声音重复率的差异,这些实验的一个警告是,他们将从动物获得的生理数据与从人类获得的心理物理数据进行了比较。在这项研究中,我们首次通过检查自由活动猫的A1中的尖峰活动,同时执行“执行/不执行”任务来区分点击声,从而直接研究了同一实验动物的听觉和潜在的神经机制。以不同的重复频率(12.5–200 Hz)训练。如先前对被动听觉动物的研究报道,A1神经元对点击序列显示了同步和非同步响应。我们进一步发现,根据同步单元的精确时间信息估算的神经性能足以将所有16.7–200 Hz与12.5 Hz重复频率区分开;然而,随着目标重复率的降低,猫表现出下降的行为表现,表明辨别两种较慢点击声的难度增加。某些同步和非同步单元的点火率很好地说明了这种行为表现。逐次试验分析表明,A1活性不受猫行为反应判断的影响。我们的结果表明,A1的主要功能是使用尖峰定时和发射速率来有效地表示时间信号,而猫则可以读出速率编码信息来执行此实验中的任务。

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