Abstract

Effects of a tone, not at the best frequency (BF), on the responses of onset units to BF tones were recorded in the ventral cochlear nucleus of the guinea pig. The off-BF tone was at a fixed non-excitatory sound level. When the two tones were gated simultaneously, a marked threshold facilitation was observed; however, no facilitation was observed if the off-BF tone burst was delayed by 5-10 ms. Facilitation in some units declined and was either absent or only just detectable, when the start of the off-BF tone preceded that of the BF by more than 10 ms. However, the responses of the majority of onset units were facilitated when the off-BF tone preceded the BF tone by as much as 20 ms. Similar results were obtained when the roles of the BF and off-BF tones were reversed. These data suggest that depolarization due to BF inputs is of shorter duration than that due to off-BF inputs.

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