Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex

Auditory neurons in bats that use frequency modulated (FM) sweeps for echolocation are selective for the behaviorally-relevant rates and direction of frequency change. Such selectivity arises through spectrotemporal interactions between excitatory and inhibitory components of the receptive field....

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Main Author: Khaleel A Razak
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2013-06-01
Series:Frontiers in Physiology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2013.00129/full
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spelling doaj-b48f0f211d3f40f094a0cd6cc62cc9862020-11-24T21:26:02ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Physiology1664-042X2013-06-01410.3389/fphys.2013.0012946752Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortexKhaleel A Razak0University of CaliforniaAuditory neurons in bats that use frequency modulated (FM) sweeps for echolocation are selective for the behaviorally-relevant rates and direction of frequency change. Such selectivity arises through spectrotemporal interactions between excitatory and inhibitory components of the receptive field. In the pallid bat auditory system, the relationship between FM sweep direction/rate selectivity and spectral and temporal properties of sideband inhibition have been characterized. Of note is the temporal asymmetry in sideband inhibition, with low-frequency inhibition (LFI) exhibiting faster arrival times compared to high-frequency inhibition (HFI). Using the two-tone inhibition over time stimulus paradigm, this study investigated the interactions between two sound parameters in shaping sideband inhibition: intensity and time. Specifically, the impact of changing relative intensities of the excitatory and inhibitory tones on arrival time of inhibition was studied. Using this stimulation paradigm, single unit data from the auditory cortex of pentobarbital-anesthetized cortex show that the threshold for LFI is on average ~8 dB lower than HFI. For equal intensity tones near threshold, LFI is stronger than HFI. When the inhibitory tone intensity is increased further from threshold, the strength asymmetry decreased. The temporal asymmetry in LFI versus HFI arrival time is strongest when the excitatory and inhibitory tones are of equal intensities or if excitatory tone is louder. As inhibitory tone intensity is increased, temporal asymmetry decreased suggesting that the relative magnitude of excitatory and inhibitory inputs shape arrival time of inhibition and FM sweep rate and direction selectivity. Given that most FM bats use downward sweeps as echolocation calls, a similar asymmetry in threshold and strength of LFI versus HFI may be a general adaptation to enhance direction selectivity while maintaining sweep-rate selective responses to downward sweeps.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2013.00129/fullEcholocationFM sweepssideband inhibitionpallid batspectrotemporal
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Khaleel A Razak
spellingShingle Khaleel A Razak
Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
Frontiers in Physiology
Echolocation
FM sweeps
sideband inhibition
pallid bat
spectrotemporal
author_facet Khaleel A Razak
author_sort Khaleel A Razak
title Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
title_short Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
title_full Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
title_fullStr Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
title_full_unstemmed Effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
title_sort effects of sound intensity on temporal properties of inhibition in the pallid bat auditory cortex
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Physiology
issn 1664-042X
publishDate 2013-06-01
description Auditory neurons in bats that use frequency modulated (FM) sweeps for echolocation are selective for the behaviorally-relevant rates and direction of frequency change. Such selectivity arises through spectrotemporal interactions between excitatory and inhibitory components of the receptive field. In the pallid bat auditory system, the relationship between FM sweep direction/rate selectivity and spectral and temporal properties of sideband inhibition have been characterized. Of note is the temporal asymmetry in sideband inhibition, with low-frequency inhibition (LFI) exhibiting faster arrival times compared to high-frequency inhibition (HFI). Using the two-tone inhibition over time stimulus paradigm, this study investigated the interactions between two sound parameters in shaping sideband inhibition: intensity and time. Specifically, the impact of changing relative intensities of the excitatory and inhibitory tones on arrival time of inhibition was studied. Using this stimulation paradigm, single unit data from the auditory cortex of pentobarbital-anesthetized cortex show that the threshold for LFI is on average ~8 dB lower than HFI. For equal intensity tones near threshold, LFI is stronger than HFI. When the inhibitory tone intensity is increased further from threshold, the strength asymmetry decreased. The temporal asymmetry in LFI versus HFI arrival time is strongest when the excitatory and inhibitory tones are of equal intensities or if excitatory tone is louder. As inhibitory tone intensity is increased, temporal asymmetry decreased suggesting that the relative magnitude of excitatory and inhibitory inputs shape arrival time of inhibition and FM sweep rate and direction selectivity. Given that most FM bats use downward sweeps as echolocation calls, a similar asymmetry in threshold and strength of LFI versus HFI may be a general adaptation to enhance direction selectivity while maintaining sweep-rate selective responses to downward sweeps.
topic Echolocation
FM sweeps
sideband inhibition
pallid bat
spectrotemporal
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fphys.2013.00129/full
work_keys_str_mv AT khaleelarazak effectsofsoundintensityontemporalpropertiesofinhibitioninthepallidbatauditorycortex
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