Phillips D P, Burkard R
Department of Psychology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
J Acoust Soc Am. 1999 May;105(5):2731-7. doi: 10.1121/1.426891.
Recent single-unit studies in anesthetized cats have revealed that the latency and strength of transient responses to tone burst stimuli are determined largely by stimulus events in the first few ms of the signal. The present study sought to extend these findings by studying the inferior colliculus potential (ICP) in unanesthetized chinchillas. The ICP magnitude and latency were studied as a function of the plateau amplitude and rise time of noise burst stimuli. ICP amplitude increased with stimulus amplitude and decreased with stimulus rise time. ICP latency decreased with stimulus amplitude and increased with stimulus rise time. The absolute values of the ICP latencies confirmed that it is only the first few ms of the stimulus which determine the timing of response initiation, and therefore, that it is not the plateau level of the stimulus that directly determines the latent period. These data constitute a direct link between earlier single-unit studies in anesthetized animals and brainstem-evoked potential data in animals and man.