Cohen Y E, Knudsen E I
Department of Neurobiology, Stanford University School of Medicine, California 94305-5401, USA.
J Neurosci. 1995 Jul;15(7 Pt 2):5152-68. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.15-07-05152.1995.
We identified a region in the archistriatum of the barn owl forebrain that contains neurons sensitive to auditory stimuli. Nearly all of these neurons are tuned for binaural localization cues. The archistriatum is known to be the primary source of motor-related output from the avian forebrain and, in barn owls, contributes to the control of gaze, much like the frontal eye fields in monkeys. The auditory region is located in the medial portion of the archistriatum, at the level of the anterior commissure, and is within the region of the archistriatum from which head saccades can be elicited by electrical microstimulation (see preceding companion article, Knudsen et al., 1995). Free-field measurements revealed that auditory sites have large, spatial receptive fields. However, within these large receptive fields, responses are tuned sharply for sound source location. Dichotic measurements showed that auditory sites are tuned broadly for frequency and that the majority are tuned to particular values of interaural time differences and interaural level differences, the principal cues used by barn owls for sound localization. The tuning of sites to these binaural cues is essentially independent of sound level. The auditory properties of units in the medial archistriatum are similar to those of units in the optic tectum, a structure that also contributes to gaze control. Unlike the optic tectum, however, the auditory region of the archistriatum does not contain a single, continuous auditory map of space. Instead, it is organized into dorsoventral clusters of sites with similar binaural (spatial) tuning. The different representations of auditory space in closely related structures in the forebrain (archistriatum) and midbrain (optic tectum) probably reflect the fact that the forebrain contributes to a wide variety of sensorimotor tasks more complicated than gaze control.
我们在仓鸮前脑的古纹状体中发现了一个区域,该区域包含对听觉刺激敏感的神经元。几乎所有这些神经元都对双耳定位线索进行了调谐。已知古纹状体是鸟类前脑与运动相关输出的主要来源,在仓鸮中,它有助于控制凝视,这与猴子的额叶眼区非常相似。听觉区域位于古纹状体的内侧部分,在前连合水平,并且位于通过电微刺激可以引发头部扫视的古纹状体区域内(见之前的配套文章,克努森等人,1995年)。自由场测量表明,听觉位点具有大的空间感受野。然而,在这些大的感受野内,对声源位置的反应调谐非常敏锐。双耳测量表明,听觉位点对频率的调谐范围很广,并且大多数位点被调谐到特定的双耳时间差和双耳声级差的值,这是仓鸮用于声音定位的主要线索。位点对这些双耳线索的调谐基本上与声级无关。内侧古纹状体中神经元的听觉特性与视顶盖中神经元的特性相似,视顶盖也是一个有助于凝视控制的结构。然而,与视顶盖不同的是,古纹状体的听觉区域不包含单一的、连续的空间听觉图谱。相反,它被组织成具有相似双耳(空间)调谐的背腹簇状位点。前脑(古纹状体)和中脑(视顶盖)中密切相关结构中听觉空间的不同表征可能反映了这样一个事实,即前脑参与了比凝视控制更复杂的各种感觉运动任务。