Compartir
Título
Pattern-sensitive neurons reveal encoding of complex auditory regularities in the rat inferior colliculus
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Auditory midbrain
Single unit recordings
Pattern alternation paradigm
SSA
MMN
Predictive coding
Clasificación UNESCO
2490 Neurociencias
2411.13 Fisiología de la Audición
Fecha de publicación
2019-01-01
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
Malmierca MS, Niño-Aguillón BE, Nieto-Diego J, Porteros Á, Pérez-González D, Escera C. (2019). Pattern-sensitive neurons reveal encoding of complex auditory regularities in the rat inferior colliculus. Neuroimage 184:889–900
Resumen
A ‘pattern alternation paradigm’ has been previously used in human ERP recordings to investigate the brain encoding of complex auditory regularities, but prior studies on regularity encoding in animal models to examine mechanisms of adaptation of auditory neuronal responses have used primarily oddball stimulus sequences to study stimulus-specific adaptation alone. In order to examine the sensitivity of neuronal adaptation to expected and unexpected events embedded in a complex sound sequence, we used a similar patterned sequence of sounds. We recorded single unit activity and compared neuronal responses in the rat inferior colliculus (IC) to sound stimuli conforming to pattern alternation regularity with those to stimuli in which occasional sound repetitions violated that alternation.
Results show that some neurons in the rat inferior colliculus are sensitive to the history of patterned stimulation and to violations of patterned regularity, demonstrating that there is a population of subcortical neurons, located as early as the level of the midbrain, that can detect more complex stimulus regularities than previously supposed and that are as sensitive to complex statistics as some neurons in primary auditory cortex.
Our findings indicate that these pattern-sensitive neurons can extract temporal and spectral regularities between successive acoustic stimuli. This is important because the extraction of regularities from the sound sequences will result in the development of expectancies for future sounds and hence, the present results are compatible with predictive coding models. Our results demonstrate that some collicular neurons, located as early as in the midbrain level, are involved in the generation and shaping of prediction errors in ways not previously considered and thus, the present findings challenge the prevailing view that perceptual organization of sound only emerges at the auditory cortex level.
URI
ISSN
1053-8119
DOI
10.1016/j.neuroimage.2018.10.012
Versión del editor
Aparece en las colecciones
- GINA. Artículos [22]
Patrocinador
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad
Ficheros en el ítem
Tamaño:
1.682Mb
Formato:
Adobe PDF
Descripción:
Versión publicada