Abstract
We examined the representation of stimulus center frequencies by the distribution of cortical activity. Recordings were made from the primary auditory cortex (area A1) of ketamine-anesthetized guinea pigs. Cortical images of tones and noise bands were visualized as the simultaneously recorded spike activity of neurons at 16 sites along the tonotopic gradient of cortical frequency representation. The cortical image of a pure tone showed a restricted focus of activity along the tonotopic gradient. As the stimulus frequency was increased, the location of the activation focus shifted from rostral to caudal. When cochlear activation was broadened by increasing the stimulus level or bandwidth, the cortical image broadened. An artificial neural network algorithm was used to quantify the accuracy of center-frequency representation by small populations of cortical neurons. The artificial neural network identified stimulus center frequency based on single-trial spike counts at as few as ten sites. The performance of the artificial neural network under various conditions of stimulus level and bandwidth suggests that the accuracy of representation of center frequency is largely insensitive to changes in the width of cortical images.
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Arenberg, J., Furukawa, S. & Middlebrooks, J. Auditory Cortical Images of Tones and Noise Bands. JARO 1, 183–194 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1007/s101620010036
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s101620010036