4.5 Article

Hemispheric and Sex Differences in Mustached Bat Primary Auditory Cortex Revealed by Neural Responses to Slow Frequency Modulations

期刊

SYMMETRY-BASEL
卷 13, 期 6, 页码 -

出版社

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/sym13061037

关键词

primary auditory cortex (A1); Doppler-shifted constant frequency (DSCF); mustached bat; sex differences; amplitude; spectral; temporal; hemispheric specialization; social communication; frequency modulation (FM)

资金

  1. National Institutes of Health [DC02054, DC008822, DC75763, HD046388]
  2. Erasmus Mundus Auditory Cognitive Exchange Program Fellowship
  3. NIH/NIMHD [U54MD007597, NIH/HICHD P50HD105328]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The mustached bat is a model for researching cortical hemispheric asymmetry in mammals, with its complex social vocalizations processed preferentially in the left primary auditory cortex. Hemispheric specializations differ between males and females, with males having a stronger asymmetry related to spectrotemporal processing based on selectivities to frequency modulations.
The mustached bat (Pteronotus parnellii) is a mammalian model of cortical hemispheric asymmetry. In this species, complex social vocalizations are processed preferentially in the left Doppler-shifted constant frequency (DSCF) subregion of primary auditory cortex. Like hemispheric specializations for speech and music, this bat brain asymmetry differs between sexes (i.e., males>females) and is linked to spectrotemporal processing based on selectivities to frequency modulations (FMs) with rapid rates (>0.5 kHz/ms). Analyzing responses to the long-duration (>10 ms), slow-rate (<0.5 kHz/ms) FMs to which most DSCF neurons respond may reveal additional neural substrates underlying this asymmetry. Here, we bilaterally recorded responses from 176 DSCF neurons in male and female bats that were elicited by upward and downward FMs fixed at 0.04 kHz/ms and presented at 0-90 dB SPL. In females, we found inter-hemispheric latency differences consistent with applying different temporal windows to precisely integrate spectrotemporal information. In males, we found a substrate for asymmetry less related to spectrotemporal processing than to acoustic energy (i.e., amplitude). These results suggest that in the DSCF area, (1) hemispheric differences in spectrotemporal processing manifest differently between sexes, and (2) cortical asymmetry for social communication is driven by spectrotemporal processing differences and neural selectivities for amplitude.

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