Abstract
Responses of single neurons to tonal signals amplitude-modulated by repeating segments of lowfrequency noise were studied in the dorsal (cochlear) medullary nucleus and midbrain auditory center (torus semicircularis) of the grass frog Rana temporaria. An autocorrelation function of the response to a total presentation and a shuffled autocorrelation function were derived. The latter was obtained by correlating the impulse response to each segment of the modulated signal with responses to all other segments with the exception of the initial one. After the necessary normalization, the function differed from the initial autocorrelation only in lacking postspike changes in excitability. A delay dependence of the ratio of the two functions directly demonstrated the time course of the postspike change in excitability of the studied cell. The majority of second-order neurons, which are in the dorsal nucleus of the medulla oblongata, were characterized only by brief intervals of absolute and relative refractoriness. However, cells with excitability that was markedly facilitated immediately after the refractory period were observed even in this nucleus. Neurons with a complex pattern of postspike changes in excitability were detected in the torus semicircularis. In these cells, a comparatively long postspike decrease in excitability was usually interrupted by intervals in which the neuron sensitivity was significantly higher than normal. The results demonstrate that spike generation has a marked effect on subsequent activity in brainstem auditory units. The effects may play an important role in the formation of the temporal pattern of neuronal responses to auditory signals.
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