Abstract

Amplitude modulation is an important acoustic cue for sound discrimination, and humans and animals are able to detect small modulation depths behaviorally. In the inferior colliculus (IC), both firing rate and phase-locking may be used to detect amplitude modulation. How neural representations that detect modulation change with age are poorly understood, including the extent to which age-related changes may be attributed to the inherited properties of ascending inputs to IC neurons. Here, simultaneous measures of local field potentials (LFPs) and single-unit responses were made from the inferior colliculus of Young and Aged rats using both noise and tone carriers in response to sinusoidally amplitude-modulated sounds of varying depths. We found that Young units had higher firing rates than Aged for noise carriers, whereas Aged units had higher phase-locking (vector strength), especially for tone carriers. Sustained LFPs were larger in Young animals for modulation frequencies 8–16 Hz and comparable at higher modulation frequencies. Onset LFP amplitudes were much larger in Young animals and were correlated with the evoked firing rates, while LFP onset latencies were shorter in Aged animals. Unit neurometric thresholds by synchrony or firing rate measures did not differ significantly across age and were comparable to behavioral thresholds in previous studies whereas LFP thresholds were lower than behavior.

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