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A sparse code for natural sound context in auditory cortex

Mateo López Espejo, Stephen V. David

2023Current Research in Neurobiology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Accurate sound perception can require integrating information over hundreds of milliseconds or even seconds. Spectro-temporal models of sound coding by single neurons in auditory cortex indicate that the majority of sound-evoked activity can be attributed to stimuli with a few tens of milliseconds. It remains uncertain how the auditory system integrates information about sensory context on a longer timescale. Here we characterized long-lasting contextual effects in auditory cortex (AC) using a diverse set of natural sound stimuli. We measured context effects as the difference in a neuron's response to a single probe sound following two different context sounds. Many AC neurons showed context effects lasting longer than the temporal window of a traditional spectro-temporal receptive field. The duration and magnitude of context effects varied substantially across neurons and stimuli. This diversity of context effects formed a sparse code across the neural population that encoded a wider range of contexts than any constituent neuron. Encoding model analysis indicates that context effects can be explained by activity in the local neural population, suggesting that recurrent local circuits support a long-lasting representation of sensory context in auditory cortex.

Topics & Concepts

Auditory cortexNatural soundsSensory systemNeural codingContext (archaeology)NeurosciencePerceptionLocal field potentialReceptive fieldPopulationAuditory systemComputer sciencePsychologySpeech recognitionBiologySociologyPaleontologyDemographyNeural dynamics and brain functionNeuroscience and Music PerceptionVisual perception and processing mechanisms
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