Cochlear nerve fiber responses to amplitude-modulated stimuli: variations with spontaneous rate and other response characteristics
N. P. Cooper, D. Robertson and G. K. Yates Department of Physiology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands. 1. Single-fiber responses to sinusoidally amplitude-modulated (AM) tones were recorded from the cochlear nerves of anesthetized guinea pigs. Stimuli were presented at the fiber's char...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1993-07, Vol.70 (1), p.370-386 |
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Zusammenfassung: | N. P. Cooper, D. Robertson and G. K. Yates
Department of Physiology, University of Western Australia, Nedlands.
1. Single-fiber responses to sinusoidally amplitude-modulated (AM) tones
were recorded from the cochlear nerves of anesthetized guinea pigs. Stimuli
were presented at the fiber's characteristic frequency (CF) and covered the
intensity range between the fiber's minimum rate threshold and 90-100 dB
SPL in 5- or 6-dB steps. The amount of modulation in each fiber's response
and the average rate of the responses were quantified. The observed
response modulation was compared with the modulation to be expected on the
assumption that the instantaneous discharge rates varied with intensity in
the same way that the average rates did (i.e., as predicted from each
fiber's average-rate vs. level function). 2. The difference between the
observed and expected response modulation varied widely across fibers. In
most fibers' the responses to a limited range of stimulus intensities
(typically between 20 and 30 dB above the fiber's rate threshold) were
modulated far more than expected on the basis of their average rates, with
responses to stimuli either above or below this range differing
progressively less from expectation. Little or no response modulation was
observed above approximately 70 dB SPL in these fibers. Other fibers
exhibited response modulation that exceeded the expected modulation by
smaller amounts, but maintained this modulation to much higher sound
pressure levels. 3. The discrepancy between the observed and expected
responses to AM stimuli also varied with the frequency of modulation (fm)
within individual fibers. The discrepancies were least pronounced at low
fms (e.g., 10 Hz) but became progressively larger as fm was increased to
between 50 and 320 Hz (subject to the inter-fiber variations described in
2, above). 4. The AM response characteristics varied systematically with
the fiber's spontaneous rate and other response characteristics (e.g., rate
threshold, CF rate vs. level function type, and rapid adaptation
characteristics). In particular, the most sensitive, high spontaneous rate
fibers had responses that adapted rapidly after the onset of a stimulus,
and showed the greatest enhancement of AM-related information at
low-to-moderate stimulus intensities. However, these fibers appeared
incapable of encoding AM-related information at high intensities, since
their response rates "saturated" and their AM response enhancements
diminished around |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1993.70.1.370 |