Mechanisms of Tone-in-Noise Encoding in the Inferior Colliculus
Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Extracellular single-unit responses to tone-in-noise (TIN) stimuli were recorded in the inferior colliculus (IC) of awake female Dutch-belted rabbits. Stimuli consisted of wideband and narrowband tone-in-noise (TIN) with on-and off-characteristic frequency tones. Neural responses to wideband TIN showed a pattern of rates that increased when the tone matched CF and decreased (with respect to noise-alone responses) when the tone was above or below CF. This result differed from narrowband TIN IC responses that depended on envelope fluctuations in the stimulus, consistent with neural-fluctuation sensitivity. The WB-TIN responses could be fit with a difference-of-gaussians model that had narrow excitation and broad inhibition; responses to TIN could not be predicted by response-maps or spectrotemporal receptive fields. Responses to diotic and contralateral presentations of WB-TIN did not differ due to presentation ear. A single-CF computational model of the IC could not predict responses to wideband TIN. However, adding local off-CF inhibitory inputs to an on-CF IC model improved accuracy. These results suggest that broad inhibition could explain encoding of wideband TIN at suprathreshold signal-to-noise ratios, whereas neural fluctuation sensitivity is more important for narrowband sounds.
Significance Statement
Tone-in-noise (TIN) stimuli are used in physiology and psychophysics to explore sound perception. Physiological studies have primarily used tones at the characteristic frequency (CF) of a neuron. Here we present a systematic investigation of inferior colliculus (IC) neuron responses to on- and off-CF tones in wideband and narrowband noise, presented diotically or contralaterally, which revealed rate reductions not previously reported. Interestingly, responses to narrowband TIN can be explained by neural fluctuation sensitivity in the IC, but responses to wideband noise resulted in fundamentally different patterns of neural activity. Adding local off-CF inhibitory inputs to an established IC computational model accurately predicted responses to wideband TIN. This work highlights the role of broad inhibition in encoding complex sounds in the IC.