Abstract

The lateral superior olive (LSO) is one of the earliest sites in the auditory pathway involved in processing acoustical cues to sound location. LSO neurons encode the interaural level difference (ILD) cue to azimuthal location. Here we investigated the effect of variations in the overall stimulus levels of sounds at the two ears on the sensitivity of LSO neurons to small differences in ILDs of pure tones. The neuronal firing rate versus ILD functions were found to depend greatly on the overall stimulus level, typically shifting along the ILD axis toward the excitatory ear and attaining greater maximal firing rates as stimulus level increased. Seventy-five percent of neurons showed significant shifts with changes in overall sound level. The range of ILDs corresponding to best neural acuity for ILDs shifted accordingly. In a simulation using the empirical data, when the overall stimulus level was randomly changed from one trial to the next, the neural discrimination thresholds for ILD, or ILD acuities, were worsened by 50-60% across the population of neurons relative to fixed stimulus levels whether ILD acuity was measured at the azimuthal midline or the ILD pedestal producing the best acuity. The impairment in ILD discrimination was attributed to the increased neural response variance imparted by varying the stimulus level. These results contrast to those observed in psychophysical studies where ILD discrimination thresholds under similar experimental conditions are invariant to overall changes in stimulus level. A simple computational model that incorporated the antagonistic inputs of bilateral LSO nuclei as well as the dorsal nuclei of the lateral lemniscus to the inferior colliculus produced a more robust encoding of ILD even in the setting of roving stimulus level. Testable predictions of this model and comparison to other computational models addressing stimulus invariance were considered.

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