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Volume 17, Number 5,
Issue of March 1, 1997
pp. 1720-1733
Copyright ©1997 Society for Neuroscience
Spatially Selective Auditory Responses in the Superior Colliculus
of the Echolocating Bat
Doreen E. Valentine and
Cynthia F. Moss
Program in Neuroscience, and Department of Psychology, Harvard
University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
MATERIALS AND METHODS
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
REFERENCES
ABSTRACT
When a bat approaches a target, it continuously modifies its
echolocation sounds and relies on incoming echo information to shape
the characteristics of its subsequent sonar cries. In addition, acoustic information about the azimuth and elevation of a sonar target
elicits orienting movements of the head and pinnae toward the sound
source. This requires a common sensorimotor interface, where echo
information is used to guide motor behaviors.
Using single-unit neurophysiological methods and free-field auditory
stimulation, we present data on biologically relevant specializations
in the superior colliculus (SC) of the bat for orientation by sonar. In
the bat's SC, two classes of spatially tuned neurons are distinguished
by their sensitivity to echoes. One population shows facilitated,
delay-tuned responses to pairs of sounds, simulating sonar emissions
and echoes. Delay tuning, related to encoding target range, may play a
role in guiding motor responses in echolocation, because the bat
adjusts its emissions with changes in target distance. The
delay-facilitated response depends on the direction of stimulation and
on the temporal relationship between the simulated emission and echo in
the sound pair, suggesting that this class of neurons represents the
location of a target in three dimensions. A second population encodes
the target in two dimensions, azimuth and elevation, and does not show
a facilitated response to echoes delivered from any locus. Encoding of
azimuth and elevation may be important for directing head aim, and this class may function in transforming auditory spatial information into
signals used to guide acoustic orientation.
Key words:
superior colliculus;
echolocation;
bats;
acoustic
orientation;
spatial perception;
sensorimotor integration
INTRODUCTION
The midbrain superior colliculus (SC; optic
tectum) of vertebrates is thought to play a role in spatial perception
and in the translation of multisensory signals into commands for the control of quick (saccadic) orienting responses. In individual species,
the organization of the SC reflects the importance of a particular
sensory modality to an animal's goal-directed behavioral responses. By
analogy with the role of the SC in the saccadic eye-movement system of
primates (Sparks, 1986
), in gaze-control orientation behavior in cat
and barn owl (Knudsen, 1982
; Middlebrooks and Knudsen, 1984
; Du Lac and
Knudsen, 1990
; Munoz et al., 1991
), and in prey-catching behavior in
pit viper and frog (Hartline et al., 1978
; Grobstein, 1988
), the SC of
the echolocating bat may play a role in integrating sensory and motor
signals that drive this animal's acoustic orientation by sonar.
The bat guides its flight and forages in darkness by emitting
ultrasonic vocal signals and listening to the echoes returning to its
ears from objects in space (Griffin, 1958
; Moss and Schnitzler, 1995
).
Binaural differences in arrival time, intensity, and spectrum of echoes
encode the location of an object in azimuth and elevation (Lawrence and
Simmons, 1982
; Simmons et al., 1983
; Pollak, 1988
). The third
dimension, the distance between the bat and a target, is determined
from the time delay between the outgoing sound and the returning echo
(Hartridge, 1945
; Simmons, 1973
). Together, these cues provide the bat
with information to form an estimate of a target's position in
three-dimensional space. The bat presumably makes use of these acoustic
cues to guide behavior appropriate for the tasks of detecting,
tracking, and capturing insect prey. Echo-derived spatial information
is ultimately integrated through neural circuitry with systems involved
in generating motor responses for tracking the target (Kick and
Simmons, 1984
) and for controlling vocal output (Metzner, 1989
, 1993
).
The bat aims the direction of its head, ears, and body toward the
target, and it changes the repetition rate and the acoustic features of
its outgoing sounds in response to spatial information contained in the
echoes (Kick and Simmons, 1984
).
The SC may play a role in a sensorimotor feedback process that
coordinates the bat's active motor control over the acoustic features
of reflected echoes. Changes in echolocation behavior that facilitate
the reception of additional sensory input are closely tied to target
range; thus, a process that integrates signals driving acoustic
orientation by sonar must include information about a target in
azimuth, elevation, and range. Our work explores the role of the SC as
a component of an adaptive sensorimotor feedback system for
orientation, directional filtering, and vocalization production by the
big brown bat, Eptesicus fuscus. Using extracellular recording methods and free-field auditory stimulation, we show two
classes of spatially selective neurons that are distinguished by their
sensitivity to the dimension of target range.
MATERIALS AND METHODS
Animal subjects. Twenty-eight big brown bats
(Eptesicus fuscus, family Vespertilionidae) were used in
physiological recording experiments. The bats were caught as adults
during the summer in eastern Massachusetts and were housed in small
groups in cages or in a larger enclosure where they could fly freely.
The circadian cycle was maintained on a of 12 hr light/dark schedule so
that their active nocturnal period occurred between 7 A.M. and 7 P.M. The temperature and humidity in the bat colony area were maintained at
25°C and 50%, respectively. They were fed ad libitum a
diet consisting of nutritionally supplemented mealworms (Tenebrio
molitor).
Surgical procedure and electrode implantation. The SC of the
bat lies on the dorsal surface of the brain as shown in Figure 1. A surgical procedure was carried out both to expose
the SC for extracellular recording and to mount a small pedestal that served to immobilize the bat's head during these experiments (see Suga
et al., 1983
; Suga and Horikawa, 1986
). Under anesthesia (ketamine/xylazine, i.m., standard dosage of 52.4 mg/kg body weight), the muscle and skin covering the dorsal cranium were retracted and the
restraint post was fastened with cyanoacrylate (Locktite 411) onto the
bone surface anterior to the SC. The bat recovered in its home cage for
2-3 d before physiological recordings were initiated.
Fig. 1.
The location of the SC in Eptesicus
fuscus on the dorsal surface of the brain. The SC lies
beneath two layers of thin bone, and is ~1.4 mm rostral-to-caudal and
1.0 mm medial-to-lateral. nCAT, Nucleus of the central
acoustic tract; Cb, cerebellum; CN, cochlear
nucleus; IC, inferior colliculus; nLL, nuclei of
the lateral lemniscus; MGB, medial geniculate body;
SC, superior colliculus; SG, suprageniculate
nucleus; SOC, superior olivary complex. Adapted from Dear et
al. (1993a)
with permission.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
On the day of the physiology experiment, the dorsal cranium was cleaned
gently with saline to reexpose the SC. The bat then was placed in a
Plexiglas restraint that was suspended by an elastic band at the center
of a double-walled acoustic booth (Industrial Acoustics). The body
restraint was designed to hold the bat stationary in a natural position
with its wings comfortably folded and to provide air space around the
bat's body. To immobilize the bat's head, the skull pedestal was
locked into a metal rod with set screws, and the whole restraint system
was supported from behind the bat by a magnetic stand at the center of
a vibration isolation table (Kinetic Systems). The bat was placed with
the tip of its snout aligned above the corner edge of the isolation
table at a distance 40 cm from each speaker mounted on the semicircular hoop.
Initially, two 50 µm diameter holes were made in the skull with a
polished needle under a surgical microscope (Zeiss OPNI). A
low-impedance (~700 k
) tungsten-indifferent electrode was inserted into a nonauditory region of the brain (anterior to the SC, lateral to
the attachment post on the dorsal midline, and dorsal to the main
extent of the bat's auditory cortex) through one of these holes and
remained there for the entire recording session. A high-impedance recording electrode (15-20 M
tungsten FHC or custom-made
platinum-iridium, courtesy of S. Macknick and G. Blasdel) was inserted
into the SC through the second 50 µm hole. This second hole was made
in the lower layer of bone overlying the SC after the upper layer was
carefully removed using a microblade (3 mm cutting edge; Wever Eye
Blade). The recording electrode was lowered using a hydraulic microdrive (Stoelting Co.) mounted on a micromanipulator. The auditory-evoked unit activity was recorded in the intermediate and deep
layers of the SC at depths between 50 and 650 µm. During the course
of the experiment, additional holes were made in the bone for electrode
penetrations and up to seven independent holes could be made in one
side of the SC. The SC was surveyed throughout its extent, except for a
lateral sector where a major blood sinus overlies the brain tissue. The
anterior and posterior borders also were not well explored.
To document recording sites, drawings of the SC on the dorsal surface
were made with reference to a 1 mm2 reticule fitted in the
right ocular of the surgical microscope, and the alignment of the
microscope to roughly the same position over the SC was achieved by
measuring the pitch and roll of the microscope with a digital
inclinometer and by referring to cranial and vascular landmarks. The
head holder and body restraint were set in a fixed position, and care
was taken to check that each bat was placed in a consistent position in
the apparatus. Using an approach that is standard in bat
neurophysiological experiments, the individual maps were pooled to
generate a composite map of the SC (Jen et al., 1984
; Wong, 1984
) (see
also O'Neill and Suga, 1982
; Dear et al., 1993a
,b). Electrolytic
lesions also were made at the final recording site by passing a small
amount of current (1-2 µA) through the tip of the recording
electrode. The bat was then perfused and the brain cut serially at 40 µm before staining with cresyl violet.
Physiological recording and data collection. Physiological
recordings were made in awake animals because auditory activity can be
severely depressed by anesthesia. The awake animals showed no overt
signs of discomfort during the experiments, and auditory activity was
elicited reliably. The protocol for the neurophysiological experiments
was carried out in accordance with standards established by the U.S.
Department of Agriculture Regulations and the Animal Welfare Act, and
the Harvard University Faculty of Arts and Sciences Standing Committee
on the Use of Animals in Research and Teaching.
Acoustic stimulation of the SC evoked multiunit activity that was
correlated with stimulus presentation, but only isolated units that
showed well driven and reliable responses were studied. Single units
were identified by constancy of amplitude and waveform of the
extracellular potential recorded from the electrode and displayed
simultaneously on analog and digital oscilloscopes. Further, in some
experiments, neural activity was stored on reel-to-reel tape for
off-line playback and inspection of the waveform. The neural activity
was amplified by a differential amplifier (World Precision Instruments)
and bandpass-filtered (300 Hz to 3 kHz; Stanford Research Systems)
before being delivered to a custom-built window discriminator set to
register a TTL pulse to the data acquisition system (Modular
Instruments) for each neural spike exceeding the threshold level set by
the experimenter. The software generated on-line raster and
peristimulus time (PST)-histogram plots of spike activity that were
stored for off-line data processing.
Spatial-acoustic stimulation. Synthetic sonar signals were
played to the awake, restrained animal through 15 custom-built ultrasonic loudspeakers arranged ~13° apart on a foam-covered semicircular hoop of 50 cm radius (Fig. 2). The sounds
were broadcast as single-sound stimuli or as pulse-echo pairs in which
the two sounds were separated by a time delay. In each of these
experiments, the pulse (P), which stands for the bat's echolocation
cry, is not self-produced but is played to the restrained bat (O'Neill and Suga, 1982
; Suga and Horikawa, 1986
; Wong and Shannon, 1988
; Covey,
1993
; Dear et al., 1993a
,b; Dear and Suga, 1995
). The simulated echo
(E) is a second, weaker sound, presented with a time delay from the
onset of P.
Fig. 2.
Experimental setup for auditory neurophysiology in
the SC of the bat showing the arrangement for manipulating the
direction and distance of an auditory stimulus during extracellular
recording. The bat was placed in the acoustic booth with its head at
the edge of the table at a distance of 40 cm from the speaker hoop. All
15 loudspeakers, arranged ~13° apart in a hemifield, were positioned at an equal distance from the bat and showed similar frequency response profiles (see Materials and Methods). Azimuthal sensitivity was studied by recording neural responses to sounds broadcast through each of the loudspeakers. The speaker hoop was rotated to move the sound source along the vertical axis to test sensitivity to changes in elevation. Target range was simulated using
pairs of sounds (P and E) separated by particular
delays.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
P-E pairs were presented in two distinct stimulus configurations: (1)
a fixed delay between a P-E pair repeated over 100 stimulus presentations, and (2) an approach epoch consisting of 11 P-E pairs
changing in delay, repeated over 25 stimulus presentations (see
abscissa in Fig. 6). The delay values in the approach epoch were
presented in 4 msec steps over a period of 2000 msec and typically
ranged from 40 msec between the paired sounds down to complete overlap
of the signals (P-E separation of 0 msec produced a single sound that
was ~0.9 dB stronger than P alone). For both the fixed delay and the
approach stimulus configurations, P and E sounds were presented alone
at the beginning and end of each epoch. Stimulus elements (unpaired and
paired) were delivered every 200 msec.
Fig. 6.
Selective delay facilitation of a single neuron.
PST-histograms for a sequence of P-E pairs in which the delay between
sounds became progressively shorter (A, approach/closing
distance) or longer (B, increasing distance) over a 2500 msec sequence of sounds. The sounds were broadcast from the speaker
evoking the maximum discharge, which in this example, was 13°
contralateral. The unit responded to P-E pairs separated by delays
ranging from 8 to 16 msec. Note that echo-delay facilitation occurred
at the same values of delay for both approach and increasing-distance
stimulus epochs. Sound levels for P and E were 84 and 64 dB SPL,
respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
The computer-generated sounds (RC-Electronics signal generation system
operated by Emit software provided by T. Haresign) were two-harmonic
hyperbolic FM sweeps, 2 msec in duration, sweeping from 50 to 25 kHz in
the first harmonic. P and E stimulus elements were matched in
frequency, except in some experiments in which the harmonic composition
was modified to present different combinations of the first and second
harmonics (see Suga et al., 1983
). Frequency bands sweeping from high
to low with a bandwidth of 20 kHz and pure tones also were used to
explore frequency selectivity. Limited-bandwidth stimuli covering a
range of 90 kHz (20-110 kHz) were used to obtain coarse
frequency-response profiles (in some cases, responses to stimuli
sweeping from 120 to 100 kHz and 30 to 10 kHz also were tested). The
frequency response of each speaker, measured using an ACO 1/4 inch
microphone and a digital oscilloscope with on-line FFT capability, was
flat within 3 dB over the range of 25-80 kHz and similar across all 15 speakers (±2 dB).
P and E were processed along separate channels by the signal generator
and were independently manipulated in frequency, intensity, and
direction. P and E signals were delivered to separate passive attenuators (Wavetek) and then through a custom-built mixer before being amplified and broadcast from the preselected speaker. E was
attenuated 20 dB relative to P, but in some experiments, this relationship was manipulated, e.g., the weaker sound was played first,
followed by a louder sound, or the two sounds were made equally loud
(see Fig. 5). Sound levels usually were varied in steps of 10 or 5 dB,
covering a range from 14 to 84 dB SPL, peak-to-peak (p-p), at the
location of the bat's ears.
Fig. 5.
Echo-delay facilitation: level versus temporal
position. The effective stimulus that drove the neuron's response was
a P-E pair, separated by 12 msec delay. Reversing the temporal order of the stronger (P) and weaker (E) stimuli eliminated the response. The
unit was tested using a fixed delay stimulus epoch broadcast at the
preferred direction (64° contralateral). The time between presentation of each stimulus element (single P, P-E pair, single E)
was 200 msec.
[View Larger Version of this Image (15K GIF file)]
Data acquisition and analysis. Isolated units were studied
and classified according to their responses to simple and complex auditory stimuli, to the location of the stimulus in one, two, or three
dimensions of space, and to the sound intensity and frequency characteristics of the stimulus. The experimental approach was first to
assess what stimulus would excite the isolated unit and, in particular,
whether the unit showed a preferential response to a P-E pair. For
units that gave a response suggesting paired-sound facilitation (see
below), the sensitivity of this response to particular time intervals
between the first (P) and second (E) sounds was examined. The next step
was to determine if the echo-delay facilitation response property
depended on the direction of the sound source along the horizontal axis
or, more generally, to map the azimuthal response profile. Third, the
sound level was attenuated to measure the relationship of discharge
rate to sound level and to explore the shape and extent of the unit's
spatial response area to changes in stimulus intensity. Fourth,
frequency sensitivity was more systematically investigated than was
carried out when the unit first was encountered. Fifth, when time
permitted the azimuth and delay response area was studied as a function of changing stimulus elevation.
For the approach sequence, spikes were counted in 0.4 msec bins, and
for the other stimulus epochs, unpaired sound, or the fixed delay
stimulus sequence, spikes were counted in 0.1 msec bins. The latency of
the neural response was corrected for the time delay for the signal to
travel the distance from the speaker to the ears of the bat and for the
delay imposed by the synchronization signal to the data acquisition
system, totaling a correction factor of 6.48 msec subtracted from the
response latencies. For units that exhibited echo-delay facilitation,
the latency of the neural response was expressed in two ways: from the
onset of the first stimulus in the pair (pulse facilitation latency,
PFL), and from the onset of the second stimulus (echo facilitation
latency, EFL) (Sullivan, 1982
; Dear et al., 1993b
). The timing of
impulses with respect to stimulus onset is demonstrated in the
raster-dot display of Figure 3A for activity
recorded from a single cell in response to a fixed delay stimulus.
Fig. 3.
Analysis of neuronal response properties.
A, Response time analysis. The time to the facilitated
response can be expressed with respect to the onset of the first
stimulus (PFL) or from the onset of the second stimulus
(EFL). B, Analysis of delay facilitation: BD (solid line), Q50%BD
(arrows indicate response at 50% of maximum),
FI (solid line with circle markers),
FR (dash-dot line with square
markers) (see Materials and Methods). In this example, BD is 12 msec and FR overlaps with the curve showing the number of
spikes/stimulus presentation because FI is 1.0.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
Spatial response areas were calculated as a best azimuth and a best
delay (for the echo-delay sensitive population) and, in a few cases,
the auditory receptive field was measured in three dimensions: azimuth,
range, and elevation. Azimuth-, range-, and frequency-related responses
were assigned a best response (peak), and the best area was defined by
the response zone > 50% of the maximum. The normalized response
profile plotted as a function of the stimulus variable was examined to
classify the response by the shape of this curve. Three response groups
were delimited on the basis of the width and number of peaks in the
profiles, and units were thus classified as selective, twin-peaked, or
broadly facilitated. The same strategy and criteria were applied to
response profiles for each stimulus parameter studied: delay, azimuth, and frequency.
The sharpness of delay tuning in the SC was described by a
quality factor derived from dividing the peak response by the width of
the response at 50% of maximum (Q50%BD; Fig.
3B) (Dear et al., 1993b
). For the special case of echo-delay
facilitation, the magnitude of facilitation was quantified as a ratio
or index of facilitation with respect to the sum of responses to each
stimulus element (Olsen and Suga, 1991
; Dear and Suga, 1995
):
Facilitation Index (FI) = (RPE-pair
(RP + RE))/(RPE-pair + RP + RE), where RPE-pair is the number of spikes
fired to the pair and RP and RE are the number
of impulses elicited from singly presented P and E stimuli in the
delay-stimulus epoch, respectively. A delay facilitation response (FR)
for each unit was calculated FR = FI × number of spikes
fired per stimulus presentation, and the maximum FR was used to assign
a value of best delay (BD) to the unit (Fig. 3B) (Suga and
O'Neill, 1979
).
RESULTS
Auditory responses in the SC of the bat
We report here on the responses of 98 units to acoustic
stimulation and show two functional classes of spatially tuned neurons that were distinguished by their sensitivity to delayed echoes presented in pulse-echo pairs: two-dimensional neurons (2D;
insensitive to echoes and spatially selective in azimuth and elevation
for regions directly in front of the bat's head or within the
contralateral acoustic hemifield) and three-dimensional neurons (3D;
echo-sensitive and spatially selective in azimuth and elevation). Each
auditory-responsive unit discharged phasically, firing on average one
spike per stimulus presentation (see below). No systematic study of
other sensory responses was pursued.
Auditory responses in 2D neurons
The neurons termed 2D (n = 66/98) were
characterized as echo-insensitive and spatially selective to the
horizontal and vertical location of acoustic stimulation. That is, they
discharged at their maximum firing rate to unpaired acoustic stimuli
arriving from regions of auditory space located within their receptive fields. The horizontal dimension at 0° elevation was tested for each
isolated unit, and the stimulus direction evoking the maximum number of
impulses was used to assign a value of best azimuth. Responses to the
vertical aspect of auditory stimulation also were tested in a subset of
cells, and the data support the role of these neurons in encoding
auditory space in 2D.
Most 2D units (n = 58/66, 88%) fired maximally to
stimuli broadcast from a centrally placed speaker, or from a region
extending almost 30° laterally from the midline in the contralateral
hemifield (Figure 4A). Only a few
units responded maximally to locations peripheral to this region, and
none preferred stimuli originating from the ipsilateral hemifield.
Within their azimuthal receptive fields (and also in the vertical
dimension; see below), echo-insensitivity, or the lack of a facilitated
response to paired P-E stimuli, was confirmed for all values of delay
presented in the approach epoch.
Fig. 4.
Distribution of best azimuth for single P
responses in 2D neurons (A). Representative auditory spatial
receptive fields in 2D neurons (B, C). Single sounds were
broadcast at 2/sec at various sound levels above the unit's minimum
threshold. The receptive field in B was mapped using a tone
stimulus of 24 kHz, 2 msec in duration. This unit also fired strongly
to FM sounds. The unit in C was studied using the standard
two-harmonic stimulus. Legend: 84 dB SPL, solid line; 74 dB
SPL, dotted line; 64 dB SPL, dashed line; 54 dB
SPL, dash-dot line. D, Sensitivity to elevation
in 2D neurons. Units were tested at their best azimuth, and each curve
represents a different unit.
[View Larger Version of this Image (32K GIF file)]
Auditory receptive fields in 2D units were broad within the frontal
zone of space. Figure 4, B and C, shows
azimuth-response curves for two representative 2D units. The size of
each unit's receptive field broadened at intense sound levels. The
azimuthal location eliciting the greatest discharge at the strongest
sound level typically continued to evoke peak activity as a function of
azimuth as the sound level was attenuated.
To determine whether neurons that are insensitive to delayed echoes
originating on the horizon show delay facilitation at some other
elevation, the approach epoch was broadcast along the vertical
dimension at best azimuth. Elevational responses to the delay stimulus
epoch at non-optimal speaker azimuths also were tested.
Neural responses to changes in elevation were recorded in seven
2D neurons. Echo-insensitive (2D) response profiles that were observed
at 0° elevation remained echo-insensitive when elevation was varied.
However, 2D units were sensitive to changing elevation, discharging
most vigorously to single sound stimulation played at 0° elevation
and from locations 18° below and above the horizon. Elevations
below 18° could not be tested due to physical constraints of our
set-up. Neural responses dropped off significantly at elevations greater than 18°. Representative elevation-response profiles are shown in Figure 4d.
Echo-delay facilitation in 3D neurons: range
Echo-delay facilitation, indicating the representation of target
range, the third spatial dimension, was demonstrated in approximately one-third (n = 32/98) of the population. Like 2D cells,
3D neurons were sensitive to the horizontal and vertical direction of
acoustic stimulation. In addition to 2D spatial sensitivity, 3D neurons were characterized by facilitation to a pair of acoustic signals simulating a sonar emission and a delayed echo. In each 3D unit studied, maximal facilitation was observed when the two sounds in the
pair were separated by a particular time interval (see Fig. 3). On
average, the maximum number of spikes fired per P-E stimulus was
1.01 ± 0.65 (n = 32 units). The same cells
responded poorly or were silent to an unpaired sound stimulus played
from the same speaker (0.14 ± 0.23 spikes/stimulus presentation).
In contrast, 2D units were maximally driven by an unpaired stimulus (0.92 ± 0.51 spikes/stimulus presentation; n = 66). Figure 12A shows the histogram distribution of
the number of impulses elicited per stimulus presentation for the
maximum response rates in 2D and 3D populations.
Fig. 12.
Histogram distribution of the average discharge
(A), the distribution of minimum thresholds (B),
and the distribution of response latencies (C) for the
population of SC neurons (N = 98). Mean discharge and
response latency reported here are to an unpaired FM sound, presented
singly or as P within a delay-stimulus epoch, and broadcast to the bat
from the optimum speaker location at 84 dB SPL. Minimum threshold is
the minimum sound level at which 0.08 spikes/stimulus presentation (2 spikes/25 epochs) were recorded. 2D cells are indicated by the
light bars; 3D neurons are shown by the dark
bars.
[View Larger Version of this Image (22K GIF file)]
Figure 5 shows the response from a single 3D unit
recorded to paired and unpaired sound stimuli. In Figure 5A,
unpaired sounds played at 84 dB SPL, p-p (P alone) and 64 dB SPL, p-p
(E alone) weakly elicited a response, whereas the paired P-E stimulus
at these same sound levels effectively drove the unit. This was true when the sound level attenuations of P and E were made equal at the
weaker sound level, although the magnitude of the response was
diminished (Figure 5B). When the sounds were both played at a stronger sound level (84/84 dB SPL), or when they were reversed such
that the first was 20 dB down from the second, the unit showed no
response (Figure 5C,D).
Using the approach epoch, delay selectivity was examined across a range
of delay values. An example of a delay-selective response is shown in
Figure 6A. The unit discharged when
the delay separation between P and E fell between 8 and 20 msec. To
determine whether delay selectivity depended on the order in which
stimulus pairs were presented, the approach epoch was modified to
present the shortest delays before the longer delays in the sequence.
As shown in Figure 6B, when the short delay values
preceded the longer intervals, the selectivity of the response remained
between 8 and 20 msec. Importantly, the unit displayed no response to
either P or E played alone.
The mean delay value to which delay facilitation (3D) neurons were
sensitive was 13.5 ± 8.1 msec (n = 32); this
value corresponds to 230 ± 138 cm in range. All but 2 neurons
were tuned to best delays between 4 and 20 msec, which corresponds to
target ranges from 68 to 340 cm. The other two responded most strongly
to a delayed stimulus separated by 40 msec. The distribution of BDs for
the population is shown in Figure 7A.
Fig. 7.
Distribution of BDs and delay response profiles in
the population of 3D neurons. BDs were between 4 and 40 msec, which
corresponds to target ranges of 68-680 cm (1 cm of distance adds 58 µsec to echo delay). The mean BD for the population of 32 units was
13.5 ± 8.1 msec (A). Based on the shape of the
delay-response profiles, 3D units were classified as selective
(B), twin-peaked (C), or broadly
facilitated(D). Individual units are indicated by different line styles.
[View Larger Version of this Image (35K GIF file)]
Although each 3D unit fired maximally to a particular value of delay,
the range of delays evoking a weaker facilitated response was sometimes
broad. Based on the delay-response profiles, the population of 3D units
was classified as selective, twin-peaked, or broadly facilitated.
Nineteen of thirty-two units (59%) displayed a single peak of echo
delay-facilitated activity along the delay axis and were judged to be
range-selective. Range-selective 3D neurons fired maximally to an
optimum delay stimulus, and the width of the facilitated response at
50% of the maximum was <12 msec across the 40 msec range of delays
that were tested. The other 13 3D units showed a second peak of
facilitation along the delay axis (n = 6/32) or
responded at a level exceeding 50% of the maximum response over a
range of delay values broader than 12 msec (n = 7/32).
Table 1 presents the distribution of 3D neurons in these
three response profile groups. Representative delay-tuning curves for
each response group are shown in Figure 7 (B, selective; C, twin-peaked; D, broadly facilitated).
Table 1.
Spatial tuning
| Delay
tuning |
Azimuthal
tuning
|
| Selective |
Twin-peaked |
Broadly
facilitated |
Undetermined |
Total |
|
| Selective |
10
/28 (36%) |
2 /28 (7%) |
4 /28 (14%) |
3 /32 |
19
/32 (59%) |
| Twin-peaked |
4 /28 (14%) |
1 /28 (4%) |
0
/28 (0%) |
1 /32 |
6 /32 (19%) |
| Broadly facilitated |
5
/28 (18%) |
1 /28 (4%) |
1 /28 (4%) |
|
7
/32 (22%) |
| Total |
19 /28 (68%) |
4 /28 (14%) |
5
/28 (18%) |
4 /32 |
|
|
|
|
The sharpness of the delay filter, which describes the selectivity of
neurons for delay, was quantified by calculating a quality factor
(Q50%BD) for the response.
Q50%BD values were calculated for units whose
BD was
40 msec (n = 30/32) and ranged from 0.70 to
5.56, with a mean and SD of 1.68 ± 1.01 (Fig. 8A). The individual means for the
selective, twin-peaked, and broadly facilitated groups were 1.91 ± 1.16 (n = 17/30) for the selective group, 1.68 ± 0.53 (n = 6/30) for the larger peak of the
twin-peaked group, and 1.13 ± 0.56 (n = 7/30) for
the group displaying broad or multipeaked echo-delay facilitation.
Fig. 8.
Distribution of Q50%BD
(A), FI (B), FR (C), and best azimuth
(D) of echo-delay facilitation in 3D neurons.
[View Larger Version of this Image (27K GIF file)]
The magnitude of facilitation quantified by the facilitation index (FI)
ranged from 0.21 to 1.00 at the neuron's best delay, with a mean of
0.67 ± 0.27 (n = 32). As shown in Figure
8B, FI for the population was not normally
distributed. Rather, 25% of 3D units discharged to a delayed-echo
sound pair but not to unpaired sound elements of the delay-stimulus
epoch at the optimum speaker location for facilitation (FI = 1.00;
n = 8/32). The distribution of FR (FI × discharge
rate) values is shown in Figure 8C.
Representation of azimuth, elevation, and target range (delay) in
3D cells
The relationship between echo-delay facilitation and the 2D
location of the sound source was studied using the standard approach epoch played from each of the loudspeakers. Every 3D unit showed response dependence on the azimuthal location of the auditory stimulus.
Approximately half of the units discharged to free-field stimuli
arriving from the contralateral auditory field but were silent when the
stimuli (paired and unpaired) came from regions of auditory space
ipsilateral to the recording site.
Auditory spatial response areas are clearly seen by plotting a 3D
contour for the response to the paired stimulus as a function of
azimuth (in degrees) and delay (in msec). The unit whose response pattern is shown in Figure 9A failed to
respond to an unpaired stimulus played from anywhere along the horizon
but showed a selective response to a simulated P-E stimulus broadcast
from within its azimuthal receptive field. Maximum facilitation to
echoes occurred when the approach epoch was played from a speaker
located 39° contralateral. Weaker facilitation was observed when the
epoch was played from speakers near the center, adjacent to the optimal speaker azimuth, and there was little response to stimulation from
azimuthal locations peripheral to 39°. The cell responded maximally
to 20 msec echo delay, discharging 1.16 spikes per stimulus presentation. FI for the best delay stimulus was 0.87, but the response
profile revealed broadly facilitated delay tuning. In a second example
(Fig. 9b), another neuron's response was more narrowly tuned along the
dimension of range than it was tuned along the horizontal axis. The
response at the unit's BD, 12 msec, and also at a suboptimum 8 msec
delay, was strong within the ipsilateral field, although the locus of
maximal activity occurred when the sound was played from 13°
contralateral.
Fig. 9.
Contour plots showing azimuth-dependent echo-delay
facilitation. The response to P-E stimulation is shown for two
different single 3D units. Sound levels for P and E were 84 and 64 dB
SPL, respectively.
[View Larger Version of this Image (52K GIF file)]
Figure 10 shows contour plots of echo-delay (range)
facilitation for 4 different units, but in this figure the plots
emphasize the borders rather than the magnitude of the response.
Looking down on the response area, two distinct patterns become
evident. The first pattern includes units that were more sharply tuned along the horizontal axis than they were tuned in the dimension of
delay (A; n = 9/28) and units that were
selective for both delay and azimuth (B; n = 10/28). The second pattern found in a small sample (C, D;
n = 6/28) shows broad tuning to stimulus azimuth and
restricted selectivity to values of delay. Table 1 summarizes the
distribution of 3D units into selective, twin-peaked, and broadly
facilitated response categories. The distribution of best horizontal
location for delay facilitation (Fig. 8D) indicates that 3D neurons preferentially responded to sounds broadcast from a
region of space 13° to 51° contralateral to the midline. In contrast, the histogram of directional responses in 2D units showed a
central-field distribution (Fig. 4A).
Fig. 10.
Contour plots showing the boundaries of
azimuth-delay selectivity in four different 3D neurons. A
and B show examples of unit responses to P-E pairs that
were selective for the direction of the sound source, whereas in
C and D the responses were more selective to
range (delay) than they were to echo azimuth.
[View Larger Version of this Image (25K GIF file)]
Echo-sensitive neural responses to three-dimensions of auditory space
were studied in two 3D neurons for 32 contralateral speaker locations.
Figure 11 shows auditory receptive fields in elevation
and delay (range) at 13° contralateral, the azimuth for peak
echo-delay facilitation (A), and at 26° contralateral (B). Peak facilitation was observed at 0° elevation and
also within regions above and below the horizon (±18°). At 26°
azimuth, the delay-response profile as a function of elevation showed
broad sensitivity. A discharge to P alone, presented at the beginning of each approach epoch, occurred when P was played from the periphery of the superior auditory field (data not shown). Peripheral
single-sound responses also were noted when the neural response was
tested as a function of changing azimuth (see below). Thus, the 3D
receptive field for this unit may be described as showing broadly
facilitated echo-delay (range) responses in the contralateral midfield
of auditory space. This zone of echo sensitivity was flanked above and
laterally by a region in which responses to single sounds were
stronger.
Fig. 11.
Contour plot of the response to P-E presentation
as a function of delay and speaker elevation at 13° (A)
and 26° (B) contralateral. Sound levels for P and E were
84 and 64 dB SPL.
[View Larger Version of this Image (57K GIF file)]
Sound sensitivity and spatial response properties of 2D and
3D neurons
For the total population, minimum response thresholds for a
stimulus broadcast from a unit's preferred direction ranged from ~14-74 dB SPL, with most thresholds falling between 34 and 64 dB SPL
(Fig. 12B). The average minimum
response threshold in the 2D population was ~20 dB higher than that
in the 3D population (2D neurons: 57 ± 11 dB SPL,
n = 66; 3D neurons: 40 ± 13 dB SPL, n = 32). In half of the 2D population, the minimum
sound level for eliciting a response was between 64 and 74 dB SPL. The
remaining neurons exhibited lower minimum thresholds for evoking
responses, although only 5 of the 66 2D cells studied fired impulses at
sound levels weaker than 34 dB SPL.
Rate-level functions were obtained for SC units using single FM
sounds. Rate-level curves in 2D units largely were monotonic functions
over the range of sound levels studied, with the greatest number of
discharges evoked by the strongest level of stimulation. Figure
13A displays rate-level curves for 7 different 2D units. In contrast, nearly every 3D unit responded
nonmonotonically to changing amplitude (Fig. 13B,C). The
shape of the rate-level curves suggests that upper and lower
thresholds bracket the response areas for 3D units. However, an upper
threshold was not always obtained, because there existed an upper limit
to the amplitude that could be broadcast from the loudspeaker without
the sound showing distortion; rather, a decline in the number of
discharges was recorded for intense and for very weak sounds with the
maximum response at some intermediate sound level. For most 3D neurons, the echo sound level producing the greatest level of facilitation was
~64 dB SPL. Attenuating or increasing the intensity of paired stimuli
from the sound level that evoked the maximum response either had little
effect or weakened the magnitude of the facilitated response.
Fig. 13.
Representative rate-intensity curves for 2D
(A) and 3D (B, C) neurons.
B, Response to a single P stimulus broadcast from 26°
contralateral in a 3D neuron. The curve shows a nonmonotonic function;
the unit's response has both an upper and a lower threshold. In
A and C, each curve represents a different
unit.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
In 3D units in which responses to P stimuli presented in the unpaired
sound epoch were systematically investigated (n = 23/32), spatial tuning in azimuth was different for echo-delay
facilitation and single P responses. In these cells, the echo-sensitive
receptive field was flanked peripherally by a region of space in which
a single P evoked a response. In 22 of these 23 3D neurons, the directionality of echo-delay-facilitated and non-delay-facilitated responses changed as a function of sound level. Attenuating the level
of P led to a systematic shift in azimuthal sensitivity to the single
sound from the periphery toward center space (Fig. 14A). A detailed study of this
response characteristic was carried out for seven 3D units that
exhibited reliable responses to unpaired sound stimulation. This
spatial response characteristic was demonstrated qualitatively in the
remaining 16 single-sound-responsive cells.
Fig. 14.
Set of hemifield polar plots of the response to a
single pulse (unpaired sound epoch) as a function of azimuth for four
different sound levels (A). Activity plotted is to a
single-sound broadcast at a rate of 2 Hz through each speaker at four
different sound levels (84, 74, 64, and 54 dB SPL). Note the azimuthal
position evoking the maximum response shifts from the periphery to a
more central location as the sound level is attenuated. B,
Set of hemifield polar plots of the azimuthal response profile to
single-sound elements and to the paired echo at BD (4 msec) of the
fixed-delay epoch. The response to the single P (unpaired sound epoch)
at the same sound level as the paired echo (64 dB SPL) is also shown (bottom right plot). Note that the magnitude of the
responses to unpaired stimuli is significantly less than the response
to the paired echo, even at the same level of acoustic stimulation. i, Ipsilateral auditory space; c, contralateral
auditory space.
[View Larger Version of this Image (18K GIF file)]
The first set of polar plots (Fig. 14A)
represents the shifting selectivity to the direction of single-sound
stimulation. The maximum response was elicited by a single sound played
at 64 dB SPL, and the rate-level relationship was nonmonotonic. The
neuron also fired strongly to stimulation at sound levels of 84, 74, and 54 dB SPL. At 84 dB SPL, the peak of spatial selectivity was peripheral to the frontal interaural plane of the bat, at 90° contralateral. When the sound level was attenuated to 74 dB SPL, the
peak response was to sound broadcast from a speaker placed 64°
contralaterally. At 64 dB SPL, the unit was maximally driven by sound
arriving over a broad region extending from 77° in the periphery to
26° contralateral. A stimulus of 54 dB SPL excited the cell when the
sound was played from the speaker at 26°.
In this example, single-sound stimulation at a rate of 2/sec maximally
evoked 1.06 spikes per stimulus presentation at 51° and 64 dB SPL.
Echo-delay facilitation also was greatest at this combination of
azimuth and intensity. However, the unit fired more than twice as many
spikes per stimulus presentation to the P-E stimulus at BD (2.68 spikes/stimulus presentation, BD = 4 msec). Further, the magnitude
of the response to the unpaired sounds broadcast during the fixed delay
trial was 0.16 spikes/stimulation for P alone (84 dB SPL) and 0.00 spikes/stimulus presentation for E alone (64 dB SPL). Figure
14B is a set of polar plots of the azimuthal
selectivity of the echo-delay facilitated response at BD, and the
response to the single P (unpaired stimulus epoch; bottom
right) at 64 dB SPL also has been plotted. This representation shows clearly that the neuron's firing was maximally driven by delayed
echo stimuli. Differences in stimulus repetition rate may account for
differences in the magnitude of the responses to unpaired stimuli
presented in the single-sound epoch (B, bottom right) and in the delay epoch (B, top right
and bottom left).
Temporal processing in the SC
The mean discharge latency for the total population of SC units
studied was 8.9 ± 3.2 msec, ranging from a minimum of 4.1 msec to
a maximum of 21.9 msec (Fig. 12C). This value expresses the
peak latency to an unpaired P stimulus of 84 dB SPL played at the
unit's best azimuth. 3D units responded with a slightly longer latency
than the 2D population for the same stimulus (3D: 9.7 ± 2.3 msec,
n = 32; 2D: 8.5 ± 3.4 msec, n = 66). In 3D units, two measures of latency were calculated (see Fig. 3).
PFL for the paired stimulus responses ranged from 11.9 to 32 msec, with a mean of 21.9 ± 4.7 msec (n = 30; BD ± 40 msec); the average EFL for the same units was 10.2 ± 3.2 msec,
ranging from 4.0 to 22.2 msec (Fig.
15A).
Fig. 15.
A, The distribution of P and E
facilitation latencies. The light bars are EFLs, and the
dark bars correspond to PFLs. B, PFL at BD for
the population of 3D neurons. C, EFL is plotted as a
function of PFL. Each symbol indicates the distribution of latencies
for the population segregated by BD.
, 4 msec BD; +, 8 msec BD; ·,
12 msec BD; *, 16 msec BD; ×, 20 msec BD.
[View Larger Version of this Image (20K GIF file)]
EFL for the paired-sound response (10.2 ± 3.2 msec) was slightly
longer than the latency to P stimuli (9.0 ± 2.9 msec), and the
variablity in the response of a given neuron was smaller than the bin
width of 400 µsec. The small shift in the average latency follows the
time-intensity trading relationship described for most other auditory
neurons, with a stronger sound evoking a discharge with a shorter
latency than a weaker sound (Pollak, 1988
; Simmons et al., 1990
;
Burkard and Moss, 1994
). No evidence of paradoxical latency shifts in
3D neurons was observed (see Sullivan, 1982
), i.e., the response
latency to the stronger pulse was not delayed with respect to the
response latency to the weaker echo.
The relationship between latency and best echo delay is shown in Figure
15. BD, determined with a 4 msec resolution, was highly correlated with
PFL (r = 0.76; Fig. 15B). Presuming that the
stronger, first sound is encoded by the bat's nervous system as its
own sonar emission, PFL is a measure of the time-of-occurrence of the
facilitated response to a returning echo after a sonar vocalization. The highly linear relationship between BD and vocalization (PFL) latency suggests that echoes arriving at the bat's ears are processed sequentially along the axis of echo delay, or target range, by 3D
cells. Although facilitated responses of 3D neurons were time-locked to
the first sound (the emitted pulse), there was a small positive latency
shift from that predicted by the timing of the first pulse alone in
cells tuned to shorter delays. Figure 15C plots EFL as a
function of the time after a biosonar pulse (PFL). Latency
progressively increases after a biosonar pulse, but the overlap of
activity at each point in time indicates that neurons tuned to
different best delays may discharge at the same time (Dear et al.,
1993b
). That is, 3D neurons with different BDs may be simultaneously
active as a function of their delay selectivity and their EFL.
Frequency sensitivity in 2D and 3D neurons
Frequency-response characteristics were explored in 67 of 98 cells by modifying the harmonic composition of the stimulus or by
presenting FM sweeps of a limited bandwidth. Thirty-one neurons (n = 16/32 3D units, 15/66 2D units) were examined
using only the standard two-harmonic stimulus.
Using FM stimuli of limited bandwidth, sensitivity to particular
frequency bandwidths was found in 36 2D and 7 3D units. Twenty-three percent (n = 10/43) of the cells discharged most
vigorously to an FM signal sweeping from 90 to 70 kHz. Another 33%
preferred a different bandwidth within the frequency range of the
second-harmonic (100 to 50 kHz). The remaining 44% responded best to
stimulation corresponding to the fundamental frequencies of the bat's
sonar pulse (50 to 25 kHz).
Topography of 2D and 3D neurons in the SC
Figure 16A shows a map of the
electrode penetrations made in the left SC of a single bat
(p36). 3D responses were recorded from the two
most anterior penetrations (#1 and #2), whereas 2D responses were found
at intermediate and caudal sites (#3, #4, #5, #6). Indicated on the
figure are the values of delay and azimuth to which each unit was
maximally responsive. The map of the structure in an individual bat
hints at a topographic organization that was also observed in the
analysis of the composite map of all unit responses. 3D neurons were
found in anterior half and near the midline, whereas the 2D units were
found throughout the extent of the SC. In the population of 2D units
studied in bat p36 (n = 5), neurons selective for the
centrally placed speaker (0°) were located anterior to units
preferring more peripheral directions, although clearly documenting an
orderly map of azimuthal space in the bat's SC would require
additional experiments.
Fig. 16.
Topography of neural responses. A, Map
of electrode penetration sites in the left SC of one bat
(p36). The numbers indicate the
order in which the sites were sampled. B, Location of 2D
(open symbol) and 3D units (asterisks) on
the dorsal surface of the SC.
[View Larger Version of this Image (21K GIF file)]
Figure 16B is a composite plot of the recording
sites. Twenty-one neurons were recorded in the right SC, but to examine
the topographic organization in the population, the locations of these sites were added to the map of the left SC. The graph plots the rostro-caudal and medio-lateral positions of the recording sites, and
an outline of the SC has been added to the figure.
As suggested by the map of responses in individual bats, 3D units were
found rostral and medial in the SC. The two classes of units overlapped
in the anterior half of the SC, but in the midcaudal-lateral region,
only 2D responses were observed. 2D and 3D neurons did not appear to
segregate into different laminae.
The properties of 2D and 3D neurons were analyzed with respect to the
composite map of recording sites. In agreement with previous findings
in the echolocating bat (Jen et al., 1984
; Poussin and Schlegel, 1984
;
Wong, 1984
), a map of azimuthal space in the SC was not evident in the
population of 2D units. The best azimuth for echo-delay facilitation
and the best delay value in 3D neurons also did not map systematically
in the SC. Quantitative measures of the delay facilitation response,
such as Q50% BD, FI, and FR, did
not show a clear pattern associated with the location of the recording
site. An analysis of response latencies offers only a hint of a map in
the SC that corresponds to the time after a biosonar emission: for a
subpopulation of SC neurons with BD = 12 msec, those firing with a
shorter EFL were found closer to the midline.
DISCUSSION
Properties of 2D and 3D neurons in the bat SC
Two neuronal populations in the SC of the echolocating bat,
Eptesicus fuscus, were distinguished by their sensitivity to
synthetic echoes and to the spatial location of auditory stimulation.
2D neurons, which were echo-insensitive and responded to auditory stimuli arriving predominantly from a central region of space, comprised 67% of the population. They discharged phasically to presentations of single, loud FM signals and did not exhibit selective firing to P-E pairs broadcast from any spatial locus. SC neurons with
2D auditory spatial tuning have been reported in the bat (Jen et al.,
1984
; Poussin and Schlegel, 1984
; Wong, 1984
) and in many other species
(e.g., cat: Wise and Irvine, 1983
; Middlebrooks and Knudsen, 1984
;
guinea pig: King and Palmer, 1983
; barn owl: Knudsen, 1982
). In these
studies, 2D acoustic neurons were classified as frontal, hemifield,
axial, or unidirectional to reflect differences in the location and
sharpness of spatial tuning. Consistent with these findings, the
majority of 2D cells in the current study showed spatially selective
responses for regions in front of the animal's interaural plane,
monotonic rate-level functions, high minimum response thresholds, and
receptive fields that generally increased with increasing stimulus
intensity.
A class of 3D neurons (33%) was distinguished by a facilitated
response to paired acoustic stimuli that represented a sonar emission
and a returning echo. Echo sensitivity in 3D neurons depended on both
the time interval separating P and E signals and the 2D location of the
sounds, indicating that these cells may encode the spatial locus of an
acoustic object in coordinates of range, azimuth, and elevation.
Although echo-delay facilitation has been observed in the bat's
auditory cortex, in thalamus, and in several structures of the
brainstem (see below), the current study is the first to demonstrate
echo-delay facilitation in the SC, where a representation of target
range that is coupled to the dimensions of azimuth and elevation may be
used to guide acoustic orientation by sonar.
Neurophysiological and anatomical considerations
The map of 2D auditory space in the bat's SC is not highly
topographic (see also Jen et al., 1984
; Poussin and Schlegel, 1984
), and a majority of directional (2D) neurons are tuned to best azimuths spanning from the center to 30-40° in the contralateral hemifield (see Figure 4A) (Jen et al., 1984
; Wong, 1984
).
Poussin and Schlegel (1984)
reported 2D-type neurons with broad
receptive fields that extended 90° to 120° in azimuth and 60° to
120° in elevation. Most of these broadly tuned neurons displayed a
constant best azimuth for changing levels of sound amplitude. A subset
of their sample showed a systematic shift in azimuthal sensitivity from the periphery toward center space as the sound level was attenuated. This response property was called pluridirectional to distinguish units
exhibiting amplitude-dependent shifts in azimuthal tuning from those
that showed azimuth-stable responses to changing amplitude (unidirectional). In the current study, using simulated emissions and
delayed echoes as stimuli, we found pluridirectional response profiles
in delay-facilitated, 3D neurons (see Fig. 14). The coupling of these
response properties suggests that the spatial zone of echo sensitivity
in cells with 3D receptive fields is flanked laterally and above by
regions in which responses to echoes are suppressed.
The anatomical connections of the SC with the brainstem and cortex
(Covey et al., 1987
; Cassedy et al., 1989) suggest that the SC
functions to intergrate spatial acoustic information from several
auditory structures with signals that convey appropriate audiomotor
responses to the motor system. Echo-delay facilitation has been
demonstrated previously in several species of bat and in several
structures of the ascending auditory pathway, including dorsal nucleus
of the lateral lemniscus (DNLL) (Covey, 1993
), intertectal nucleus
(ITN) (Feng et al., 1978
; Dear and Suga, 1995
), inferior colliculus
(IC) (Mittmann and Wenstrup, 1994
; Yan and Suga, 1996
), medial
geniculate body (MGB) (Olsen and Suga, 1991
), and auditory cortex (AC)
(Suga and O'Neill, 1979
; Wong and Shannon, 1988
; Dear et al.,
1993a
,b). Comparing the mean neural response latencies across
structures studied in Eptesicus fuscus, the time to firing
in the SC (2D: 8.5 ± 3.4 msec; 3D: 9.7 ± 2.3 msec) falls between the average latencies reported for DNLL (7.8 ± 3.5 msec; Covey, 1993
) and AC (non-delay-tuned: 13.8 ± 5.7 msec;
delay-tuned: 12.1 ± 5.5 msec, Dear et al., 1993b
), although the
overlap with the brainstem nucleus is considerable. The DNLL is thought
to function as a link between the binaural system that processes spatial-acoustic information and the orientation system (Covey, 1993
).
Spatially selective delay facilitation in the SC may be influenced by
inputs from DNLL, as well as from IC and cortex.
In contrast to the sharply delay-tuned responses observed in the MGB
(Olsen and Suga, 1991
) and AC of the mustache bat (Suga and Horikawa,
1986
), delay-facilitated neurons in SC and other structures of
Eptesicus (DNLL: Covey, 1993
; ITN: Dear and Suga, 1995
; AC:
Dear et al., 1993a
) are broadly tuned along the range axis. In the
mustache bat, thalamic and cortical delay-sensitive neurons respond
predominantly to delay values corresponding to close target ranges,
typically between 14 and 140 cm, although BDs for ranges up to 400 cm
also were reported (Suga and Horikawa, 1986
). The distribution of BDs
in the AC of FM bats, Eptesicus and Myotis, also
covers close target ranges (Wong and Shannon, 1988
; Dear et al.,
1993b
). In the SC and in the brainstem, the greatest representation was
found for best delays between 8 and 16 msec, corresponding to 140-280
cm in range.
The directional sensitivity of range facilitation found in the current
study is a property that may represent a functional specialization of
the bat's SC, where azimuthal, elevational, and distance cues may
converge to guide perceptually driven orientation and vocalization
responses. Delay-tuned neurons in the AC of the mustache bat do not
show a strong directional preference for echo-delay stimuli and respond
most strongly to sound delivered from the center of space (Suga et al.,
1990
). In most experiments, however, the direction of the P-E stimulus
is not varied from a center position; thus, it is not known whether 3D
sonar sensitivity is a property expressed in the delay-tuned neurons of
other auditory structures.
Functional and experimental considerations
An important consideration is whether a synthetic P-E stimulus
effectively mimics a sonar emission and a returning echo. In AC,
single-unit responses to simulated P-E stimuli and to self-produced emissions triggering playback of delayed echoes were shown to be
identical, whereas self-produced vocalizations in the absence of
returning echoes failed to elicit firing from the same unit (Kawasaki
et al., 1988
). In the SC, feedback from self-produced emissions may
contribute to mechanisms of integrating sensory information with motor
error signals that encode the characteristics of orienting responses.
In the current study, several lines of evidence support the use of a
paired-sound stimulus as an effective substitute for a self-emitted
pulse and a returning echo. The delay-tuning properties and the values
of range that are represented are both physiological and behaviorally
relevant; responses to paired and unpaired stimuli are selective and
directional, and dependent on the temporal order of P and E signals.
Further, the 200 msec time separation between paired and unpaired
elements in stimulus epochs is 100 times longer than the aural
integration time of Eptesicus fuscus (Surlykke and Bojesen,
1996
), and thus it is highly unlikely that the sound energy of signals
separated by 200 msec would sum or be processed as delayed echoes of
the initial unpaired pulse. Moreover, 200 msec corresponds to 34.5 m, a distance nearly 7 times the normal operating range of the bat's
sonar system (Griffin, 1958
; Kick, 1982
). This indicates that the sound
elements within a stimulus epoch are each encoded as separate neural
events. The single-sound elements thus serve as important control
stimuli for demonstrating delay facilitation, which is a selective
response to a paired-signal stimulus.
Behavioral relevance
The architecture of the SC in the bat suggests a 2D spatial
construct within which neurons tuned to three dimensions may interact to direct motor output (vocal and orientation responses) appropriate for both the bat's position and distance relative to the target. 2D
cells may function to direct the aim of the head and pinnae to a
desired position. The activity of 3D neurons may be to coordinate the
reception of echo information with vocalizations and movements of the
head and ears over a closing dimension of range. Given the operating
range suggested by the distribution of BDs in the SC, 3D neurons may
function particularly during the approach sequence of insect pursuit
when the bat is between 1 and 2 m from the target (Kick and
Simmons, 1984
). In support of a role for the SC in approach-tracking behavior, we have shown that microstimulation elicits movements of the
head and pinnae coupled to the production of sonar vocalizations (Valentine and Moss, 1997
) (see also Schuller and Radtke-Schuller, 1990
). The directional control of vocal behavior along an axis of
closing distance is an integral part of the bat's acoustic orientation, and our single-unit and microstimulation data fit the
general notion that the SC is involved in coordinating species-specific orienting behaviors.
FOOTNOTES
Received March 25, 1996; revised Nov. 26, 1996; accepted Dec. 2, 1996.
This research was supported by a National Science Foundation Young
Investigator Award (IBN-9258255), a Whitehall Foundation Grant
(J92-10), and Milton funds awarded to C.F.M., and a Sackler Programme
grant to D.E.V. We thank T. Haresign for writing the computer software
used for generating our acoustic stimuli and C. Hines for modifying the
program to allow us to switch the direction of the sound source. We
also thank L. Miller for providing us with a prototype and materials to
build our ultrasonic loudspeakers, and M. Zagaeski, J. Wadsworth, A. Grossetête, R. Iannucci, and L. Taft for technical assistance. We
gratefully acknowledge S. Dear for his assistance with preparing a set
of reference series of histological sections of the bat's brain and
for his helpful advice. We also thank U. Dräger and B. Burkard
for their advice and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive
comments on the manuscript. LeCroy Instruments generously donated the
FFT software used for speaker calibration.
Correspondence should be addressed to Cynthia F. Moss at her current
address: Department of Psychology, University of Maryland, College
Park, MD 20742.
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