Abstract

Approximately 25% of peripheral auditory neurons having low characteristic frequencies (CFs) and broad tuning, and recorded from immature animals, responded to two-tone stimuli with increases in discharge rate greater than predicted by linear summation of the responses to probe tones (facilitation), in contrast to the two-tone suppression observed in adult animals and in more sharply tuned immature neurons. Facilitation was not seen after 81 gestational days and was not observed when test tones produced a substantial increase in rate when presented alone. The fact that some neural responses were facilitated under conditions of two-tone stimulation during the final stages of cochlear differentiation provides additional evidence that signal transduction is fundamentally different in neonatal kittens than in adults. A linear model of basilar membrane mechanics coupled to nonlinear neural processes is proposed which can account for the production of facilitation.

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