Malone Brian J, Beitel Ralph E, Vollmer Maike, Heiser Marc A, Schreiner Christoph E
Coleman Memorial Laboratory, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143,
Coleman Memorial Laboratory, Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143.
J Neurosci. 2015 Apr 15;35(15):5904-16. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.4833-14.2015.
Amplitude modulations are fundamental features of natural signals, including human speech and nonhuman primate vocalizations. Because natural signals frequently occur in the context of other competing signals, we used a forward-masking paradigm to investigate how the modulation context of a prior signal affects cortical responses to subsequent modulated sounds. Psychophysical "modulation masking," in which the presentation of a modulated "masker" signal elevates the threshold for detecting the modulation of a subsequent stimulus, has been interpreted as evidence of a central modulation filterbank and modeled accordingly. Whether cortical modulation tuning is compatible with such models remains unknown. By recording responses to pairs of sinusoidally amplitude modulated (SAM) tones in the auditory cortex of awake squirrel monkeys, we show that the prior presentation of the SAM masker elicited persistent and tuned suppression of the firing rate to subsequent SAM signals. Population averages of these effects are compatible with adaptation in broadly tuned modulation channels. In contrast, modulation context had little effect on the synchrony of the cortical representation of the second SAM stimuli and the tuning of such effects did not match that observed for firing rate. Our results suggest that, although the temporal representation of modulated signals is more robust to changes in stimulus context than representations based on average firing rate, this representation is not fully exploited and psychophysical modulation masking more closely mirrors physiological rate suppression and that rate tuning for a given stimulus feature in a given neuron's signal pathway appears sufficient to engender context-sensitive cortical adaptation.
幅度调制是自然信号的基本特征,包括人类语音和非人类灵长类动物的发声。由于自然信号经常出现在其他竞争信号的背景中,我们使用前向掩蔽范式来研究先前信号的调制背景如何影响皮层对后续调制声音的反应。心理物理学上的“调制掩蔽”,即调制“掩蔽”信号的呈现提高了检测后续刺激调制的阈值,已被解释为中央调制滤波器组的证据并据此进行建模。皮层调制调谐是否与此类模型兼容仍然未知。通过记录清醒松鼠猴听觉皮层中对成对的正弦幅度调制(SAM)音调的反应,我们表明SAM掩蔽器的先前呈现引发了对后续SAM信号的放电率的持续且调谐的抑制。这些效应的总体平均值与广泛调谐的调制通道中的适应兼容。相比之下,调制背景对第二个SAM刺激的皮层表征的同步性影响很小,并且这种效应的调谐与放电率观察到的不匹配。我们的结果表明,尽管调制信号的时间表征比基于平均放电率的表征对刺激背景变化更具鲁棒性,但这种表征并未得到充分利用,心理物理学调制掩蔽更紧密地反映了生理速率抑制,并且给定神经元信号通路中给定刺激特征的速率调谐似乎足以产生上下文敏感的皮层适应。