Publication | Open Access
A Discontinuous Tonotopic Organization in the Inferior Colliculus of the Rat
160
Citations
43
References
2008
Year
MusicPsychoacousticsAuditory CortexLateral LemniscusAnatomyBasilar MembranePhoneticsDiscontinuous Tonotopic OrganizationHealth SciencesAuditory ProcessingAuditory ModelingBest Frequency ProgressionMorphogenesisHuman HearingNervous SystemNeuroanatomyPhysiologyInferior ColliculusAuditory PhysiologyNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemSpeech PerceptionMedicineAuditory SystemAudible Frequencies
Audible frequencies of sound are encoded in a continuous manner along the length of the cochlea, and frequency is transmitted to the brain as a representation of place on the basilar membrane. The resulting tonotopic map has been assumed to be a continuous smooth progression from low to high frequency throughout the central auditory system. Here, physiological and anatomical data show that best frequency is represented in a discontinuous manner in the inferior colliculus, the major auditory structure of the midbrain. Multiunit maps demonstrate a distinct stepwise organization in the order of best frequency progression. Furthermore, independent data from single neurons show that best frequencies at octave intervals of approximately one-third are more prevalent than others. These data suggest that, in the inferior colliculus, there is a defined space of tissue devoted to a given frequency, and input within this frequency band may be pooled for higher-level processing.
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