Laboratory of Auditory Neurophysiology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
J Neurophysiol. 2013 Mar;109(6):1638-57. doi: 10.1152/jn.00698.2012. Epub 2012 Dec 28.
Auditory-vocal interaction, the modulation of auditory sensory responses during vocal production, is an important but poorly understood neurophysiological phenomenon in nonhuman primates. This sensory-motor processing has important behavioral implications for self-monitoring during vocal production as well as feedback-mediated vocal control for both animals and humans. Previous studies in marmosets have shown that a large portion of neurons in the auditory cortex are suppressed during self-produced vocalization but have primarily focused on a single type of isolation vocalization. The present study expands previous analyses to compare auditory-vocal interaction of cortical responses between different types of vocalizations. We recorded neurons from the auditory cortex of unrestrained marmoset monkeys with implanted electrode arrays and showed that auditory-vocal interactions generalize across vocalization types. We found the following: 1) Vocal suppression and excitation are a general phenomenon, occurring for all four major vocalization types. 2) Within individual neurons, suppression was the more general response, occurring for multiple vocalization types, while excitation tended to be more specific to a single vocalization type. 3) A subset of neurons changed their responses between different types of vocalization, most often from strong suppression or excitation for one vocalization to unresponsive for another, and only rarely from suppression to excitation. 4) Differences in neural responses between vocalization types were weakly correlated with passive response properties, measured by playbacks of acoustic stimuli including recorded vocalizations. These results indicate that vocalization-induced modulation of the auditory cortex is a general phenomenon applicable to all vocalization types, but variations within individual neurons suggest possible vocalization-specific coding.
听觉-发声相互作用,即在发声过程中对听觉感觉反应的调制,是一种重要但尚未被充分理解的非人类灵长类动物的神经生理现象。这种感觉-运动处理对发声过程中的自我监控以及动物和人类的反馈介导的声音控制具有重要的行为意义。先前在狨猴中的研究表明,听觉皮层中的很大一部分神经元在自我产生的发声过程中被抑制,但主要集中在单一类型的隔离发声上。本研究扩展了先前的分析,以比较不同类型发声之间皮质反应的听觉-发声相互作用。我们从使用植入电极阵列的未受约束的狨猴的听觉皮层中记录神经元,并表明听觉-发声相互作用在发声类型之间具有通用性。我们发现:1)发声抑制和发声激发是一种普遍现象,发生在所有四种主要发声类型中。2)在单个神经元中,抑制是更为普遍的反应,发生在多种发声类型中,而激发往往更特定于单一发声类型。3)一部分神经元在不同的发声类型之间改变其反应,最常见的是从对一种发声的强烈抑制或激发转变为对另一种发声的无反应,而很少从抑制转变为激发。4)发声类型之间的神经反应差异与被动反应特性弱相关,通过包括记录发声在内的声刺激的回放来测量。这些结果表明,发声引起的听觉皮层调制是一种普遍现象,适用于所有发声类型,但单个神经元内的变化表明可能存在发声特异性编码。