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Article Dans Une Revue Journal of Neuroscience Année : 2020

Noise-sensitive but more precise subcortical representations co-exist with robust cortical encoding of natural vocalizations

Résumé

Humans and animals maintain accurate sound discrimination in the presence of loud sources of background noise. It is commonly assumed that this ability relies on the robustness of auditory cortex responses. However, only a few attempts have been made to characterize neural discrimination of communication sounds masked by noise at each stage of the auditory system and to quantify the noise effects on the neuronal discrimination in terms of alterations in amplitude modulations. Here, we measured neural discrimination between communication sounds masked by a vocalization-shaped stationary noise from multiunit responses recorded in the cochlear nucleus, inferior colliculus, auditory thalamus, and primary and secondary auditory cortex at several signal-to-noise ratios (SNRs) in anesthetized male or female guinea pigs. Masking noise decreased sound discrimination of neuronal populations in each auditory structure, but collicular and thalamic populations showed better performance than cortical populations at each SNR. In contrast, in each auditory structure, discrimination by neuronal populations was slightly decreased when tone-vocoded vocalizations were tested. These results shed new light on the specific contributions of subcortical structures to robust sound encoding, and suggest that the distortion of slow amplitude modulation cues conveyed by communication sounds is one of the factors constraining the neuronal discrimination in subcortical and cortical levels.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Dissecting how auditory neurons discriminate communication sounds in noise is a major goal in auditory neuroscience. Robust sound coding in noise is often viewed as a specific property of cortical networks, although this remains to be demonstrated. Here, we tested the discrimination performance of neuronal populations at five levels of the auditory system in response to conspecific vocalizations masked by noise. In each acoustic condition, subcortical neurons better discriminated target vocalizations than cortical ones and in each structure, the reduction in discrimination performance was related to the reduction in slow amplitude modulation cues.
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Dates et versions

hal-02618024 , version 1 (25-05-2020)

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Paternité - Pas d'utilisation commerciale

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Samira Souffi, Christian Lorenzi, Léo Varnet, Chloé Huetz, Jean-Marc Edeline. Noise-sensitive but more precise subcortical representations co-exist with robust cortical encoding of natural vocalizations. Journal of Neuroscience, 2020, 40 (27), pp.5228-5246. ⟨10.1523/JNEUROSCI.2731-19.2020⟩. ⟨hal-02618024⟩
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