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Author Notes:

Email Address:Robert C. Liu :robert.liu@emory.edu

K.N.S., F.G.L., and R.C.L. designed research.

K.N.S. and F.G.L. performed research.

K.N.S., F.G.L., C.L.Z., and K.K.C. analyzed data.

K.N.S., F.G.L., C.L.Z., K.K.C., and R.C.L. wrote the paper.

We thank E.E. Galindo-Leon for electrophysiology assistance.

The authors declare no competing financial interests.

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Research Funding:

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health Grants R01-DC-8343 (R.C.L.), F31-DC-11987 (K.N.S.), T90-DA-032466 (C.L.Z.), and T32-HD-071845 (K.K.C.).

Keywords:

  • auditory object
  • categorization
  • communication
  • map plasticity
  • neural coding
  • ultrasonic vocalization

Behavioral Relevance Helps Untangle Natural Vocal Categories in a Specific Subset of Core Auditory Cortical Pyramidal Neurons

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Journal Title:

Journal of Neuroscience Nursing

Volume:

Volume 35, Number 6

Publisher:

, Pages 2636-2645

Type of Work:

Article | Final Publisher PDF

Abstract:

Sound categorization is essential for auditory behaviors like acoustic communication, but its genesis within the auditory pathway is not well understood—especially for learned natural categories like vocalizations, which often share overlapping acoustic features that must be distinguished (e.g., speech). We use electrophysiological mapping and single-unit recordings in mice to investigate how representations of natural vocal categories within core auditory cortex are modulated when one category acquires enhanced behavioral relevance. Taking advantage of a maternal mouse model of acoustic communication, we found no long-term auditory cortical map expansion to represent a behaviorally relevant pup vocalization category—contrary to expectations from the cortical plasticity literature on conditioning with pure tones. Instead, we observed plasticity that improved the separation between acoustically similar pup and adult vocalization categories among a physiologically defined subset of late-onset, putative pyramidal neurons, but not among putative interneurons. Additionally, a larger proportion of these putative pyramidal neurons in maternal animals compared with nonmaternal animals responded to the individual pup call exemplars having combinations of acoustic features most typical of that category. Together, these data suggest that higher-order representations of acoustic categories arise from a subset of core auditory cortical pyramidal neurons that become biased toward the combination of acoustic features statistically predictive of membership to a behaviorally relevant sound category.

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© 2015 the authors

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits making multiple copies, distribution, public display, and publicly performance, distribution of derivative works, provided the original work is properly cited. This license requires credit be given to copyright holder and/or author, copyright and license notices be kept intact.

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