4.4 Article

A robust and compact population code for competing sounds in auditory cortex

期刊

JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY
卷 130, 期 3, 页码 775-787

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/jn.00148.2023

关键词

auditory cortex; complex scene analysis; information theory; neural coding; population coding

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A small subset of neurons in the auditory cortex can robustly encode competing sounds from different spatial locations, with the labeled line code performing better.
Cortical circuits encoding sensory information consist of populations of neurons, yet how information aggregates via pooling individual cells remains poorly understood. Such pooling may be particularly important in noisy settings where single-neuron encoding is degraded. One example is the cocktail party problem, with competing sounds from multiple spatial locations. How populations of neurons in auditory cortex code competing sounds have not been previously investigated. Here, we apply a novel information-theoretic approach to estimate information in populations of neurons in mouse auditory cortex about competing sounds from multiple spatial locations, including both summed population (SP) and labeled line (LL) codes. We find that a small subset of neurons is sufficient to nearly maximize mutual information over different spatial configurations, with the labeled line code outperforming the summed population code and approaching information levels attained in the absence of competing stimuli. Finally, information in the labeled line code increases with spatial separation between target and masker, in correspondence with behavioral results on spatial release from masking in humans and animals. Taken together, our results reveal that a compact population of neurons in auditory cortex provides a robust code for competing sounds from different spatial locations.

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