TY - JOUR
T1 - Interaural Time Difference Tuning in the Rat Inferior Colliculus is Predictive of Behavioral Sensitivity
AU - Li, Kongyan
AU - Rajendran, Vani G.
AU - Mishra, Ambika Prasad
AU - Chan, Chloe H.K.
AU - Schnupp, Jan W.H.
PY - 2021/9/15
Y1 - 2021/9/15
N2 - While a large body of literature has examined the encoding of binaural spatial cues in the auditory midbrain, studies that ask how quantitative measures of spatial tuning in midbrain neurons compare with an animal's psychoacoustic performance remain rare. Researchers have tried to explain deficits in spatial hearing in certain patient groups, such as binaural cochlear implant users, in terms of declines in apparent reductions in spatial tuning of midbrain neurons of animal models. However, the quality of spatial tuning can be quantified in many different ways, and in the absence of evidence that a given neural tuning measure correlates with psychoacoustic performance, the interpretation of such finding remains very tentative. Here, we characterize ITD tuning in the rat inferior colliculus (IC) to acoustic pulse train stimuli with varying envelopes and at varying rates, and explore whether quality of tuning correlates behavioral performance. We quantified both mutual information (MI) and neural d' as measures of ITD sensitivity. Neural d' values paralleled behavioral ones, declining with increasing click rates or when envelopes changed from rectangular to Hanning windows, and they correlated much better with behavioral performance than MI. Meanwhile, MI values were larger in an older, more experienced cohort of animals than in naive animals, but neural d' did not differ between cohorts. However, the results obtained with neural d' and MI were highly correlated when ITD values were coded simply as left or right ear leading, rather than specific ITD values. Thus, neural measures of lateralization ability (e.g. d' or left/right MI) appear to be highly predictive of psychoacoustic performance in a two-alternative forced choice task.
AB - While a large body of literature has examined the encoding of binaural spatial cues in the auditory midbrain, studies that ask how quantitative measures of spatial tuning in midbrain neurons compare with an animal's psychoacoustic performance remain rare. Researchers have tried to explain deficits in spatial hearing in certain patient groups, such as binaural cochlear implant users, in terms of declines in apparent reductions in spatial tuning of midbrain neurons of animal models. However, the quality of spatial tuning can be quantified in many different ways, and in the absence of evidence that a given neural tuning measure correlates with psychoacoustic performance, the interpretation of such finding remains very tentative. Here, we characterize ITD tuning in the rat inferior colliculus (IC) to acoustic pulse train stimuli with varying envelopes and at varying rates, and explore whether quality of tuning correlates behavioral performance. We quantified both mutual information (MI) and neural d' as measures of ITD sensitivity. Neural d' values paralleled behavioral ones, declining with increasing click rates or when envelopes changed from rectangular to Hanning windows, and they correlated much better with behavioral performance than MI. Meanwhile, MI values were larger in an older, more experienced cohort of animals than in naive animals, but neural d' did not differ between cohorts. However, the results obtained with neural d' and MI were highly correlated when ITD values were coded simply as left or right ear leading, rather than specific ITD values. Thus, neural measures of lateralization ability (e.g. d' or left/right MI) appear to be highly predictive of psychoacoustic performance in a two-alternative forced choice task.
KW - Interaural time difference
KW - click trains
KW - envelope
KW - inferior colliculus
KW - neural d'
KW - mutual information
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85112752495&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - https://www.scopus.com/record/pubmetrics.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85112752495&origin=recordpage
U2 - 10.1016/j.heares.2021.108331
DO - 10.1016/j.heares.2021.108331
M3 - RGC 21 - Publication in refereed journal
SN - 0378-5955
VL - 409
JO - Hearing Research
JF - Hearing Research
M1 - 108331
ER -