Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, KU Leuven Medical School, Campus Gasthuisberg O&N 2, Herestraat 49 bus 1021, 3000 Leuven, Belgium.
J Assoc Res Otolaryngol. 2012 Dec;13(6):799-817. doi: 10.1007/s10162-012-0346-z. Epub 2012 Sep 5.
Frequency selectivity is a fundamental cochlear property. Recent studies using otoacoustic emissions and psychophysical forward masking suggest that frequency selectivity is sharper in human than in common laboratory species. This has been disputed based on reports using compound action potentials (CAPs), which reflect activity in the auditory nerve and can be measured in humans. Comparative data of CAPs, obtained with a variety of simultaneous masking protocols, have been interpreted to indicate similarity of frequency tuning across mammals and even birds. Unfortunately, there are several issues with the available CAP measurements which hamper a straightforward comparison across species. We investigate sharpness of CAP tuning in cat and chinchilla using a forward masking notched-noise paradigm--which is less confounded by cochlear nonlinearities than simultaneous masking paradigms and similar to what was used in the psychophysical study reporting sharper tuning in humans. Our parametric study, using different probe frequencies and notch widths, shows relationships consistent with those of auditory nerve fibers (ANFs). The sharpness of tuning, quantified by Q(10) factors, is negatively correlated with probe level and increases with probe frequency, but the Q(10) values are generally lower than the average trend for ANFs. Like the single fiber data, tuning for CAPs is sharper in cat than in chinchilla, but the two species are similar in the dependence of tuning on probe frequency and in the relationship between tuning in ANFs and CAP. Growth-of-maskability functions show slopes <1 indicating that with increasing probe level the probe is more susceptible to cochlear compression than the masker. The results support the use of forward-masked CAPs as an alternative measure to estimate ANF tuning and to compare frequency tuning across species.
频率选择性是耳蜗的一个基本特性。最近的研究使用耳声发射和心理物理前向掩蔽表明,人类的频率选择性比常见的实验室物种更尖锐。这一点基于使用复合动作电位 (CAP) 的报告存在争议,CAP 反映了听神经的活动,可以在人类中测量。使用各种同时掩蔽协议获得的 CAP 比较数据被解释为表明哺乳动物甚至鸟类的频率调谐相似。不幸的是,可用的 CAP 测量存在几个问题,这些问题妨碍了物种之间的直接比较。我们使用前向掩蔽缺口噪声范式研究猫和南美栗鼠的 CAP 调谐锐度 - 与同时掩蔽范式相比,该范式受耳蜗非线性的影响较小,与报告人类调谐更尖锐的心理物理研究中使用的范式相似。我们使用不同的探针频率和缺口宽度进行的参数研究显示出与听觉神经纤维 (ANFs) 一致的关系。调谐锐度由 Q(10) 因素量化,与探针水平呈负相关,并随探针频率增加而增加,但 Q(10) 值通常低于 ANFs 的平均趋势。与单纤维数据一样,CAP 的调谐在猫中比在南美栗鼠中更尖锐,但两种物种在调谐对探针频率的依赖性和 ANFs 和 CAP 调谐之间的关系上相似。掩蔽可变性增长函数的斜率 <1 表明,随着探针水平的增加,探针比掩蔽器更容易受到耳蜗压缩的影响。结果支持使用前向掩蔽 CAP 作为替代测量方法来估计 ANF 调谐并比较物种之间的频率调谐。