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Volume 16, Number 18,
Issue of September 15, 1996
pp. 5854-5863
Copyright ©1996 Society for Neuroscience
Intracellular Characterization of Song-Specific Neurons in the
Zebra Finch Auditory Forebrain
Received March 26, 1996; revised June 14, 1996; accepted June 25, 1996.
Michael S. Lewicki
Computation and Neural Systems Program, California Institute of
Technology, Pasadena, California 91125
Auditory neurons in the forebrain nucleus HVc (hyperstriatum
ventrale pars caudale) are highly sensitive to the temporal structure
of the bird's own song. These ``song-specific'' neurons respond
strongly to forward song, weakly to the song with the order of the
syllables reversed, and little or not at all to reversed song. To
investigate the cellular mechanisms underlying these responses,
in vivo intracellular recordings were made from adult
HVc neurons. Song-specific cells could be divided into those that
responded strongly throughout autogenous song (tonic cells) and those
that responded with bursts of action potentials at specific points
during the song (phasic cells). Phasic cells were hyperpolarized during
autogenous song, even though this stimulus also elicited the strongest
response. Less hyperpolarization was seen to the same song with the
syllables in reverse order, and none was seen to reversed song. The
responses of both types of song-specific cells contained high-frequency
bursts of action potentials. The bursts of the phasic cells showed
attenuation of the action potential height and lack of full
repolarization after each spike. This type of bursting was
significantly correlated with the amount of hyperpolarization before
each burst in phasic cells and nonauditory cells that generated such
bursts spontaneously. These data suggest that song-specific neurons use
long-lasting hyperpolarization as a mechanism to integrate auditory
context, an important component of temporal order selectivity.
Hyperpolarization also may increase the precision of spike timing,
which could be important for the neural code subserving song learning
and production.
Key words:
auditory response properties;
burst firing;
hyperpolarization;
neural integration;
context sensitivity;
order
sensitivity;
song system;
HVc;
intracellular recording
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