Abstract
The auditory system of the mustache bat (Pteronotus parnellii) contains a disproportionately large representation of a narrow frequency band, corresponding to the dominant, 60 kHz component of its echolocation signal. In the inferior colliculus (IC), the 60 kHz representation comprises an architectonically distinct region called the dorsoposterior division (DPD), which is accessible for detailed physiological study. We examined the topographic distribution of binaural responses within this one frequency-band representation of the inferior colliculus. We describe two primary results. First, neurons with different binaural response properties are spatially segregated into one of four binaural response-specific regions of the DPD: a large region of monaural (EO) responses; two regions containing neurons excited by sound from both ears (EE); and a region containing neurons excited by one ear and inhibited by the other (EI). Regions dominated by 60 kHz EI responses are also found in the lateral extremity of the IC, probably within the external nucleus. These results demonstrate functionally defined subdivisions in a single frequency-band representation of the IC. Moreover, they suggest that brain stem auditory projections to the DPD and/or intrinsic connections within the DPD are highly organized. Second, within the EI region of the DPD, there is a systematic shift in the sensitivity of EI multiunit responses to interaural intensity disparities (IIDs). Dorsally, EI neurons are suppressed only by relatively loud ipsilateral sounds, and there is a systematic decrease in the relative ipsilateral intensity required for suppression at more ventral recording sites. This result demonstrates that neurons sensitive to a sound localization cue are systematically organized within a frequency-band representation of the inferior colliculus. It has implications for the manner in which the location of a sound source is encoded within the primary auditory pathway.
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