4.7 Article

Midbrain-Level Neural Correlates of Behavioral Tone-in-Noise Detection: Dependence on Energy and Envelope Cues

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 41, Issue 34, Pages 7206-7223

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3103-20.2021

Keywords

budgerigar; envelope; inferior colliculus; operant conditioning; roving level; tone in noise

Categories

Funding

  1. National Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders [R01-DC017519, R01-DC001641]

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This study found that budgerigar TIN detection thresholds are similar to human thresholds, with minimal impact from challenging roving-level conditions. Many midbrain neurons showed decreasing response rates as TIN signal-to-noise ratio was increased, attributed to amplitude-modulation tuning and flatter amplitude envelopes in higher SNR tone-plus-noise stimuli.
Hearing in noise is a problem often assumed to depend on encoding of energy level by channels tuned to target frequencies, but few studies have tested this hypothesis. The present study examined neural correlates of behavioral tone-in-noise (TIN) detection in budgerigars (Melopsittacus undulatus, either sex), a parakeet species with human-like behavioral sensitivity to many simple and complex sounds. Behavioral sensitivity to tones in band-limited noise was assessed using operant -conditioning procedures. Neural recordings were made in awake animals from midbrain-level neurons in the inferior colliculus, the first processing stage of the ascending auditory pathway with pronounced rate-based encoding of stimulus amplitude modulation. Budgerigar TIN detection thresholds were similar to human thresholds across the full range of frequencies (0.5-4 kHz) and noise levels (45-85 dB SPL) tested. Also as in humans, thresholds were minimally affected by a challenging roving-level condition with random variation in background-noise level. Many midbrain neurons showed a decreasing response rate as TIN signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) was increased by elevating the tone level, a pattern attributable to amplitude-modulation tuning in these cells and the fact that higher SNR tone-plus-noise stimuli have flatter amplitude envelopes. TIN thresholds of individual neurons were as sensitive as behavioral thresholds under most conditions, perhaps surprisingly even when the unit's characteristic frequency was tuned an octave or more away from the test frequency. A model that combined responses of two cell types enhanced TIN sensitivity in the roving-level condition. These results highlight the importance of midbrainlevel envelope encoding and off-frequency neural channels for hearing in noise.

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