Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America.
Kresge Hearing Research Institute and Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States of America.
PLoS Biol. 2023 Aug 31;21(8):e3002277. doi: 10.1371/journal.pbio.3002277. eCollection 2023 Aug.
The ability to process and act upon incoming sounds during locomotion is critical for survival and adaptive behavior. Despite the established role that the auditory cortex (AC) plays in behavior- and context-dependent sound processing, previous studies have found that auditory cortical activity is on average suppressed during locomotion as compared to immobility. While suppression of auditory cortical responses to self-generated sounds results from corollary discharge, which weakens responses to predictable sounds, the functional role of weaker responses to unpredictable external sounds during locomotion remains unclear. In particular, whether suppression of external sound-evoked responses during locomotion reflects reduced involvement of the AC in sound processing or whether it results from masking by an alternative neural computation in this state remains unresolved. Here, we tested the hypothesis that rather than simple inhibition, reduced sound-evoked responses during locomotion reflect a tradeoff with the emergence of explicit and reliable coding of locomotion velocity. To test this hypothesis, we first used neural inactivation in behaving mice and found that the AC plays a critical role in sound-guided behavior during locomotion. To investigate the nature of this processing, we used two-photon calcium imaging of local excitatory auditory cortical neural populations in awake mice. We found that locomotion had diverse influences on activity of different neurons, with a net suppression of baseline-subtracted sound-evoked responses and neural stimulus detection, consistent with previous studies. Importantly, we found that the net inhibitory effect of locomotion on baseline-subtracted sound-evoked responses was strongly shaped by elevated ongoing activity that compressed the response dynamic range, and that rather than reflecting enhanced "noise," this ongoing activity reliably encoded the animal's locomotion speed. Decoding analyses revealed that locomotion speed and sound are robustly co-encoded by auditory cortical ensemble activity. Finally, we found consistent patterns of joint coding of sound and locomotion speed in electrophysiologically recorded activity in freely moving rats. Together, our data suggest that rather than being suppressed by locomotion, auditory cortical ensembles explicitly encode it alongside sound information to support sound perception during locomotion.
在运动过程中处理和响应传入声音的能力对生存和适应性行为至关重要。尽管听觉皮层(AC)在行为和上下文相关的声音处理中起着既定的作用,但以前的研究发现,与静止相比,听觉皮层活动在运动过程中平均受到抑制。虽然听觉皮层对自身产生声音的反应的抑制是由于传出放电引起的,这削弱了对可预测声音的反应,但在运动过程中对不可预测的外部声音的反应较弱的功能作用仍不清楚。特别是,运动过程中对外源性声音诱发反应的抑制是否反映了 AC 对声音处理的参与减少,或者是否是由于在这种状态下替代神经计算的掩蔽所致,仍未解决。在这里,我们检验了以下假设,即在运动过程中,声音诱发反应的减少反映的不是简单的抑制,而是与运动速度的明确和可靠编码的出现之间的权衡。为了验证这一假设,我们首先在行为小鼠中使用神经失活,发现 AC 在运动中的声音引导行为中起着关键作用。为了研究这种处理的性质,我们在清醒小鼠中使用双光子钙成像技术对局部兴奋性听觉皮质神经元群体进行了研究。我们发现,运动对不同神经元的活动有不同的影响,与基线减去的声音诱发反应和神经刺激检测的净抑制一致,与以前的研究一致。重要的是,我们发现运动对基线减去的声音诱发反应的净抑制作用强烈受到增强的持续活动的影响,这种持续活动压缩了反应动态范围,并且这种持续活动不是增强的“噪声”,而是可靠地编码了动物的运动速度。解码分析表明,运动速度和声音是由听觉皮质集合活动可靠地共同编码的。最后,我们在自由运动大鼠的电生理记录活动中发现了声音和运动速度的联合编码的一致模式。总的来说,我们的数据表明,听觉皮质集合不仅通过声音信息来明确地编码运动,还支持运动过程中的声音感知。