Abstract
We examined the effects of temporal shaping of a tone burst on the frequency specificity of evoked responses in gerbils. Frequency specificity was assessed by means of whole-nerve action potential (AP) tuning curves (APTCs). The envelopes of the onset and offset portions of the AP-eliciting tone burst (or probe) were either a linear or nonlinear (1/4 sine) function of time. At probe frequencies of 1, 4 and 8 kHz, APTCs in the two envelope conditions were similar in shape and had equally narrow tips. This was true at both low (40-50 dB SPL) and high (70-75 dB SPL) probe levels. It suggests that tone bursts in the two envelope conditions evoke AP responses that are equally frequency specific. Despite these similarities, a notable difference in the two conditions was found at high probe levels. Specifically, raising the level of an 8-kHz probe from 40 to 70 dB SPL resulted in a downward shift of the APTC tip frequency, and this shift was greater for probes with linear on-off envelopes than for those with non...
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