Abstract

1. Responses to pure tones were recorded from single neurons in the anteroventral cochlear nucleus (AVCN) in kittens ranging in age from 4 to 45 days. Different response properties mature at different times after birth. 2. The shapes of response areas of AVCN neurons after the 1st postnatal week resemble those recorded in the AVCN and auditory nerve of the adult. During the 1st wk after birth the high-frequency portion of the response area is extended. Phase-locked responses to stimulus frequencies below about 600 Hz occur at this time. Phase vs. frequency measurements and shapes of response areas indicate that by the end of the 1st postnatal week the cochlear partition may be capable of supporting a traveling wave along most of its length. 3. Functional development proceeds through a second phase which lasts until the end of the 2nd or the beginning of the 3rd wk of life. During that time threshold, maximal discharge rate, and average first-spike latency achieve adult values. 4. Phase-locking to low-frequency tones, to the extent displayed by phase-sensitive neurons in the adult AVCN or auditory nerve, is achieved last, after the 3rd or 4th wk postpartum.

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