Optical mapping of neural responses and their γ-aminobutyric acid-ergic inhibitory effects in the auditory brainstem of early postnatal mice

2004 ◽  
Vol 124 (0) ◽  
pp. 43-49
Author(s):  
Shu-Ping Cai ◽  
Tadashi Doi ◽  
Shen Jing ◽  
Toshihiko Kaneko ◽  
Shi-Ming Yang ◽  
...  
eLife ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dan FM Goodman ◽  
Victor Benichoux ◽  
Romain Brette

The activity of sensory neural populations carries information about the environment. This may be extracted from neural activity using different strategies. In the auditory brainstem, a recent theory proposes that sound location in the horizontal plane is decoded from the relative summed activity of two populations in each hemisphere, whereas earlier theories hypothesized that the location was decoded from the identity of the most active cells. We tested the performance of various decoders of neural responses in increasingly complex acoustical situations, including spectrum variations, noise, and sound diffraction. We demonstrate that there is insufficient information in the pooled activity of each hemisphere to estimate sound direction in a reliable way consistent with behavior, whereas robust estimates can be obtained from neural activity by taking into account the heterogeneous tuning of cells. These estimates can still be obtained when only contralateral neural responses are used, consistently with unilateral lesion studies.


1998 ◽  
Vol 18 (4) ◽  
pp. 1345-1362 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katsushige Sato ◽  
Yoko Momose-Sato ◽  
Akihiko Hirota ◽  
Tetsuro Sakai ◽  
Kohtaro Kamino

2021 ◽  
Vol 15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fan-Yin Cheng ◽  
Can Xu ◽  
Lisa Gold ◽  
Spencer Smith

The efferent auditory nervous system may be a potent force in shaping how the brain responds to behaviorally significant sounds. Previous human experiments using the frequency following response (FFR) have shown efferent-induced modulation of subcortical auditory function online and over short- and long-term time scales; however, a contemporary understanding of FFR generation presents new questions about whether previous effects were constrained solely to the auditory subcortex. The present experiment used sine-wave speech (SWS), an acoustically-sparse stimulus in which dynamic pure tones represent speech formant contours, to evoke FFRSWS. Due to the higher stimulus frequencies used in SWS, this approach biased neural responses toward brainstem generators and allowed for three stimuli (/bɔ/, /bu/, and /bo/) to be used to evoke FFRSWSbefore and after listeners in a training group were made aware that they were hearing a degraded speech stimulus. All SWS stimuli were rapidly perceived as speech when presented with a SWS carrier phrase, and average token identification reached ceiling performance during a perceptual training phase. Compared to a control group which remained naïve throughout the experiment, training group FFRSWS amplitudes were enhanced post-training for each stimulus. Further, linear support vector machine classification of training group FFRSWS significantly improved post-training compared to the control group, indicating that training-induced neural enhancements were sufficient to bolster machine learning classification accuracy. These results suggest that the efferent auditory system may rapidly modulate auditory brainstem representation of sounds depending on their context and perception as non-speech or speech.


1999 ◽  
Vol 91 (6) ◽  
pp. 1788-1788 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hawa Keita ◽  
Danielle Henzel-Rouellé ◽  
Hervé Dupont ◽  
Jean-Marie Desmonts ◽  
Jean Mantz

Background Experimental data suggest that volatile anesthetics induce significant changes in extracellular dopamine concentrations in the striatum, a restricted but functionally important brain area. In the present study, the authors used a superfused slice preparation to examine the effects of halothane and isoflurane on both spontaneous and N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-evoked dopamine release in the striatum, and whether these effects involved actions of these anesthetics mediated by gamma-aminobutyric acid receptors in this structure. Methods Radioactivity collected from 5-min fractions was compared in the absence (basal release) or presence (evoked release) of NMDA alone and combined with various pharmacologic or anesthetic agents in slices of the dorsolateral striatum and synaptosomes of the whole striatum preloaded with 3H-dopamine and superfused with artificial cerebrospinal fluid. Results In tetrodotoxin-treated striatal slices, halothane and isoflurane significantly increased dopamine basal release (EC50 = 0.33 mM and 0.41 mM for halothane and isoflurane, respectively). Both agents decreased the NMDA-evoked dopamine release in both the absence (IC50 = 0.15 mM and 0.14 mM for halothane and isoflurane, respectively) and presence (IC50 = 0.15 mM for both halothane and isoflurane) of tetrodotoxin in slices, and in synaptosomes (IC50 = 0.19 mM for both halothane and isoflurane). NMDA-induced dopamine release was significantly enhanced by bicuculline, a gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor antagonist. Halothane and isoflurane inhibitory effects on NMDA-evoked dopamine release were significantly reduced in the presence of bicuculline. Conclusion These results indicate that halothane and isoflurane decrease the NMDA-evoked dopamine release by acting directly at dopamine terminals in striatal slices. They support the involvement of both depression of presynaptic NMDA receptor-mediated responses and enhancement of gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor-mediated responses in these effects.


2012 ◽  
Vol 2012 ◽  
pp. 1-5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng Liu ◽  
Xingkuan Bu ◽  
Feiyun Wu ◽  
Guangqian Xing

Objective. To explore possible corelationship between the cochlear nerve deficiency (CND) and unilateral auditory neuropathy (AN).Methods. From a database of 85 patients with unilateral profound sensorineural hearing loss, eight who presented with evoked otoacoustic emissions (EOAEs) or cochlear microphonic (CM) in the affected ear were diagnosed with unilateral AN. Audiological and radiological records in eight patients with unilateral AN were retrospectively reviewed.Results. Eight cases were diagnosed as having unilateral AN caused by CND. Seven had type “A” tympanogram with normal EOAE in both ears. The other patient had unilateral type “B” tympanogram and absent OAE but CM recorded, consistent with middle ear effusion in the affected ear. For all the ears involved in the study, auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) were either absent or responded to the maximum output and the neural responses from the cochlea were not revealed when viewed by means of the oblique sagittal MRI on the internal auditory canal.Conclusion. Cochlear nerve deficiency can be seen by electrophysiological evidence and may be a significant cause of unilateral AN. Inclined sagittal MRI of the internal auditory canal is recommended for the diagnosis of this disorder.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bjorn Herrmann ◽  
Sonia Yasmin ◽  
Kurdo Araz ◽  
David W. Purcell ◽  
Ingrid S. Johnsrude

Optimal perception requires adaptation to sounds in the environment. Adaptation involves representing the acoustic stimulation history in neural response patterns, for example, by altering response magnitude or latency as sound-level statistics change. Neurons in the auditory brainstem of rodents are sensitive to acoustic stimulation history and sound-level statistics, but the degree to which the human brainstem exhibits such neural adaptation is unclear. In six electroencephalography experiments with over 125 participants, we demonstrate that acoustic stimuli within a time window of at least 40 ms are represented in response latency of the human brainstem. We further show that human brainstem responses adapt to sound-level statistical information, but that neural sensitivity to sound-level statistics is less reliable when acoustic stimuli need to be integrated over periods of ~40 ms. Our results provide evidence of adaptation to sound-level statistics in the human brainstem and of the timescale over which sound-level statistics affect neural responses to sound. The research delivers an important link to studies on neural adaptation in non-human animals.


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