Integration of Hetero Inputs to Guinea Pig Auditory Cortex Established by Fear Conditioning

Author(s):  
Yoshinori Ide ◽  
Muneyoshi Takahashi ◽  
Johan Lauwereyns ◽  
Minoru Tsukada ◽  
Takeshi Aihara
2012 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 67-77 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yoshinori Ide ◽  
Muneyoshi Takahashi ◽  
Johan Lauwereyns ◽  
Guy Sandner ◽  
Minoru Tsukada ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 88 (2) ◽  
pp. 1040-1050 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jufang He ◽  
Yan-Qin Yu ◽  
Ying Xiong ◽  
Tsutomu Hashikawa ◽  
Ying-Shing Chan

In the present study, we investigated the point-to-point modulatory effects from the auditory cortex to the thalamus in the guinea pig. Corticofugal modulation on thalamic neurons was studied by electrical activation of the auditory cortex. The modulation effect was sampled along the frontal or sagittal planes of the auditory thalamus, focusing on the ventral division (MGv) of the medial geniculate body (MGB). Electrical activation was targeted at the anterior and dorsocaudal auditory fields, to which the MGv projects and from which it assumptively receives reciprocal projections. Of the 101 MGv neurons examined by activation of the auditory cortex through passing pulse trains of 100–200 μA current into one after another of the three implanted electrodes (101 neurons × 3 stimulation sites = 303 cases), 208 cases showed a facilitatory effect, 85 showed no effect, and only 10 cases (7 neurons) showed an inhibitory effect. Among the cases of facilitation, 63 cases showed a facilitatory effect >100%, and 145 cases showed a facilitatory effect from 20–100%. The corticofugal modulatory effect on the MGv of the guinea pig showed a widespread, strong facilitatory effect and very little inhibitory effect. The MGv neurons showed the greatest facilitations to stimulation by the cortical sites, with the closest correspondence in BF. Six of seven neurons showed an elevation of the rate-frequency functions when the auditory cortex was activated. The comparative results of the corticofugal modulatory effects on the MGv of the guinea pig and the cat, together with anatomical findings, hint that the strong facilitatory effect is generated through the strong corticothalamic direct connection and that the weak inhibitory effect might be mainly generated via the interneurons of the MGv. The temporal firing pattern of neuronal response to auditory stimulus was also modulated by cortical stimulation. The mean first-spike latency increased significantly from 15.7 ± 5.3 ms with only noise-burst stimulus to 18.3 ± 4.9 ms ( n = 5, P < 0.01, paired t-test), while the auditory cortex was activated with a train of 10 pulses. Taking these results together with those of previous experiments conducted on the cat, we speculate that the relatively weaker inhibitory effect compared with that in the cat could be due to the smaller number of interneurons in the guinea pig MGB. The corticofugal modulation of the firing pattern of the thalamic neurons might enable single neurons to encode more auditory information using not only the firing rate but also the firing pattern.


2010 ◽  
Vol 103 (4) ◽  
pp. 2050-2061 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyle T. Nakamoto ◽  
Trevor M. Shackleton ◽  
Alan R. Palmer

One of the fundamental questions of auditory research is how sounds are segregated because, in natural environments, multiple sounds tend to occur at the same time. Concurrent sounds, such as two talkers, physically add together and arrive at the ear as a single input sound wave. The auditory system easily segregates this input into a coherent percept of each of the multiple sources. A common feature of speech and communication calls is their harmonic structure and in this report we used two harmonic complexes to study the role of the corticofugal pathway in the processing of concurrent sounds. We demonstrate that, in the inferior colliculus (IC) of the anesthetized guinea pig, deactivation of the auditory cortex altered the temporal and/or the spike response to the concurrent, monaural harmonic complexes. More specifically, deactivating the auditory cortex altered the representation of the relative level of the complexes. This suggests that the auditory cortex modulates the representation of the level of two harmonic complexes in the IC. Since sound level is a cue used in the segregation of auditory input, the corticofugal pathway may play a role in this segregation.


2020 ◽  
Vol 190 ◽  
pp. 111292
Author(s):  
Shuyun Liu ◽  
Ye Yang ◽  
Xuemei Mao ◽  
Liqiang Deng ◽  
Changjuan Shuai ◽  
...  

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