4.4 Article

Reorganization in processing of spectral and temporal input in the rat posterior auditory field induced by environmental enrichment

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
Volume 107, Issue 5, Pages 1457-1475

Publisher

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.01057.2010

Keywords

cortical plasticity; phase-locked responses; voice onset time; nonprimary cortex; receptive field

Funding

  1. James S. McDonnell Foundation
  2. NIDCD [5R01DC010433]

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Jakkamsetti V, Chang KQ, Kilgard MP. Reorganization in processing of spectral and temporal input in the rat posterior auditory field induced by environmental enrichment. J Neurophysiol 107: 1457-1475, 2012. First published November 30, 2011; doi:10.1152/jn.01057.2010.-Environmental enrichment induces powerful changes in the adult cerebral cortex. Studies in primary sensory cortex have observed that environmental enrichment modulates neuronal response strength, selectivity, speed of response, and synchronization to rapid sensory input. Other reports suggest that nonprimary sensory fields are more plastic than primary sensory cortex. The consequences of environmental enrichment on information processing in nonprimary sensory cortex have yet to be studied. Here we examine physiological effects of enrichment in the posterior auditory field (PAF), a field distinguished from primary auditory cortex (A1) by wider receptive fields, slower response times, and a greater preference for slowly modulated sounds. Environmental enrichment induced a significant increase in spectral and temporal selectivity in PAF. PAF neurons exhibited narrower receptive fields and responded significantly faster and for a briefer period to sounds after enrichment. Enrichment increased time-locking to rapidly successive sensory input in PAF neurons. Compared with previous enrichment studies in A1, we observe a greater magnitude of reorganization in PAF after environmental enrichment. Along with other reports observing greater reorganization in nonprimary sensory cortex, our results in PAF suggest that nonprimary fields might have a greater capacity for reorganization compared with primary fields.

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