Abstract

A multiplicative combination of tuning to interaural time difference (ITD) and interaural level difference (ILD) contributes to the generation of spatially selective auditory neurons in the owl's midbrain. Previous analyses of multiplicative responses in the owl have not taken into consideration the frequency-dependence of ITD and ILD cues that occur under natural listening conditions. Here, we present a model for the responses of ITD- and ILD-sensitive neurons in the barn owl's inferior colliculus which satisfies constraints raised by experimental data on frequency convergence, multiplicative interaction of ITD and ILD, and response properties of afferent neurons. We propose that multiplication between ITD- and ILD-dependent signals occurs only within frequency channels and that frequency integration occurs using a linear-threshold mechanism. The model reproduces the experimentally observed nonlinear responses to ITD and ILD in the inferior colliculus, with greater accuracy than previous models. We show that linear-threshold frequency integration allows the system to represent multiple sound sources with natural sound localization cues, whereas multiplicative frequency integration does not. Nonlinear responses in the owl's inferior colliculus can thus be generated using a combination of cellular and network mechanisms, showing that multiple elements of previous theories can be combined in a single system.

Highlights

  • The barn owl is able to pinpoint sound sources with great accuracy after hearing only a short burst of sound [1]

  • We present a model for the emergence of auditory spatial tuning in interaural time difference (ITD)- and interaural level difference (ILD)-sensitive neurons of the barn owl’s ICx (Figure 2)

  • The ITD- and ILD-dependent cues form the input to a network of spiking neurons that model two regions of the inferior colliculus where ITD- and ILD-sensitive neurons are found, ICx and its afferent neurons in ICcl

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Summary

Introduction

The barn owl is able to pinpoint sound sources with great accuracy after hearing only a short burst of sound [1]. This orienting response is mediated by spatially-selective auditory neurons in the midbrain [2,3]. Space-specific neurons in the barn owl’s auditory space map gain spatial selectivity as a result of tuning to combinations of the interaural time difference (ITD) and interaural level difference (ILD; [8,9]). Signals converge across frequency in the external nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICx), where the auditory space map is generated [22,23]. The response to ITD and ILD in the membrane potential of space-specific neurons in ICx is well described by a multiplication of an ITDdependent component and an ILD-dependent component [6]

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