Processing of sound sequences in macaque auditory cortex: response enhancement

J Neurophysiol. 1999 Sep;82(3):1542-59. doi: 10.1152/jn.1999.82.3.1542.

Abstract

It is well established that the tone-evoked response of neurons in auditory cortex can be attenuated if another tone is presented several hundred milliseconds before. The present study explores in detail a complementary phenomenon in which the tone-evoked response is enhanced by a preceding tone. Action potentials from multiunit groups and single units were recorded from primary and caudomedial auditory cortical fields in lightly anesthetized macaque monkeys. Stimuli were two suprathreshold tones of 100-ms duration, presented in succession. The frequency of the first tone and the stimulus onset asynchrony (SOA) between the two tones were varied systematically, whereas the second tone was fixed. Compared with presenting the second tone in isolation, the response to the second tone was enhanced significantly when it was preceded by the first tone. This was observed in 87 of 130 multiunit groups and in 29 of 69 single units with no obvious difference between different auditory fields. Response enhancement occurred for a wide range of SOA (110-329 ms) and for a wide range of frequencies of the first tone. Most of the first tones that enhanced the response to the second tone evoked responses themselves. The stimulus, which on average produced maximal enhancement, was a pair with a SOA of 120 ms and with a frequency separation of about one octave. The frequency/SOA combinations that induced response enhancement were mostly different from the ones that induced response attenuation. Results suggest that response enhancement, in addition to response attenuation, provides a basic neural mechanism involved in the cortical processing of the temporal structure of sounds.

MeSH terms

  • Acoustic Stimulation / methods
  • Action Potentials / physiology
  • Animals
  • Auditory Cortex / physiology
  • Auditory Perception / physiology*
  • Macaca fascicularis
  • Time Factors