Overton Jacqueline A, Recanzone Gregg H
Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, California; and.
Center for Neuroscience, University of California, Davis, California; and Department of Neurobiology, Physiology and Behavior, University of California, Davis, California
J Neurophysiol. 2016 Jun 1;115(6):2911-23. doi: 10.1152/jn.01098.2015. Epub 2016 Mar 2.
Temporal envelope processing is critical for speech comprehension, which is known to be affected by normal aging. Whereas the macaque is an excellent animal model for human cerebral cortical function, few studies have investigated neural processing in the auditory cortex of aged, nonhuman primates. Therefore, we investigated age-related changes in the spiking activity of neurons in primary auditory cortex (A1) of two aged macaque monkeys using amplitude-modulated (AM) noise and compared these responses with data from a similar study in young monkeys (Yin P, Johnson JS, O'Connor KN, Sutter ML. J Neurophysiol 105: 582-600, 2011). For each neuron, we calculated firing rate (rate code) and phase-locking using phase-projected vector strength (temporal code). We made several key findings where neurons in old monkeys differed from those in young monkeys. Old monkeys had higher spontaneous and driven firing rates, fewer neurons that synchronized with the AM stimulus, and fewer neurons that had differential responses to AM stimuli with both a rate and temporal code. Finally, whereas rate and temporal tuning functions were positively correlated in young monkeys, this relationship was lost in older monkeys at both the population and single neuron levels. These results are consistent with considerable evidence from rodents and primates of an age-related decrease in inhibition throughout the auditory pathway. Furthermore, this dual coding in A1 is thought to underlie the capacity to encode multiple features of an acoustic stimulus. The apparent loss of ability to encode AM with both rate and temporal codes may have consequences for stream segregation and effective speech comprehension in complex listening environments.
时间包络处理对于言语理解至关重要,而已知其会受到正常衰老的影响。猕猴是研究人类大脑皮质功能的优秀动物模型,但很少有研究调查老年非人灵长类动物听觉皮层的神经处理情况。因此,我们使用调幅(AM)噪声研究了两只老年猕猴初级听觉皮层(A1)中神经元的放电活动随年龄的变化,并将这些反应与一项针对年轻猕猴的类似研究的数据进行了比较(Yin P, Johnson JS, O'Connor KN, Sutter ML. J Neurophysiol 105: 582 - 600, 2011)。对于每个神经元,我们使用相位投影矢量强度计算放电率(速率编码)和锁相(时间编码)。我们有几个关键发现,老年猕猴的神经元与年轻猕猴的不同。老年猕猴具有更高的自发和驱动放电率,与AM刺激同步的神经元更少,并且对AM刺激具有速率和时间编码差异反应的神经元也更少。最后,虽然速率和时间调谐函数在年轻猕猴中呈正相关,但在老年猕猴中,无论是群体水平还是单个神经元水平,这种关系都消失了。这些结果与来自啮齿动物和灵长类动物的大量证据一致,表明整个听觉通路中与年龄相关的抑制作用下降。此外,A1中的这种双重编码被认为是编码声学刺激多个特征能力的基础。在速率和时间编码方面编码AM的能力明显丧失,可能会对复杂听觉环境中的流分离和有效的言语理解产生影响。