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Published August 1, 2008 | public
Journal Article

Variability Reduction in Interaural Time Difference Tuning in the Barn Owl

Abstract

The interaural time difference (ITD) is the primary auditory cue used by the barn owl for localization in the horizontal direction. ITD is initially computed by circuits consisting of axonal delay lines from one of the cochlear nuclei and coincidence detector neurons in the nucleus laminaris (NL). NL projects directly to the anterior part of the dorsal lateral lemniscal nucleus (LLDa), and this area projects to the core of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICcc) in the midbrain. To show the selectivity of an NL neuron for ITD requires averaging of responses over several stimulus presentations for each ITD. In contrast, ICcc neurons detect their preferred ITD in a single burst of stimulus. We recorded extracellularly the responses of LLDa neurons to ITD in anesthetized barn owls and show that this ability is already present in LLDa, raising the possibility that ICcc inherits its noise reduction property from LLDa

Additional Information

© 2008 The American Physiological Society. Submitted 12 March 2008; accepted in final form 27 May 2008. We thank G. B. Christianson and J. L. Peña for providing the nucleus laminaris and inferior colliculus data, E. Akutagawa for histology, and J. L. Peña for comments on the manuscript. This work was funded by National Institute of Deafness and Other Communication Disorders Grants DC-00134 to M. Konishi and DC-007690 to J. L. Peña.

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023