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The Journal of Neuroscience, May 1, 2000, 20(9):3469-3486
A Site of Auditory Experience-Dependent Plasticity in the Neural
Representation of Auditory Space in the Barn Owl's Inferior
Colliculus
Joshua I.
Gold and
Eric I.
Knudsen
Department of Neurobiology, Stanford University, Stanford,
California 94305-5125
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ABSTRACT |
The barn owl's optic tectum contains a map of auditory space that
is based, in part, on a map of interaural time difference (ITD).
Previous studies have shown that this ITD map is shaped by auditory
experience. In this study, we investigated whether the plasticity
responsible for experience-induced changes in ITD tuning in the tectum
occurs within the tectum itself or at an earlier stage in the auditory pathway.
We altered auditory experience in young owls by implanting an acoustic
filtering device in one ear that caused frequency-dependent changes in
sound timing and level. We analyzed the representation of ITD in normal
and device-reared owls in two nuclei in the ascending pathway: the
external nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICX), the primary source
of ascending auditory input to the tectum, and the lateral shell of the
central nucleus of the inferior colliculus (ICCls), the primary source
of input to the ICX. In the ICX, device rearing caused adaptive,
frequency-dependent changes in ITD tuning, as well as changes in
frequency tuning. These changes in tuning were similar to changes that
occurred in the optic tectum in the same owls. In contrast, in the
ICCls, tuning for ITD and frequency was unaffected by device rearing.
The data indicate that plasticity at the level of the ICX is largely
responsible for the adaptive adjustments in ITD tuning and frequency
tuning that are observed in the optic tecta of owls raised with
abnormal auditory experience.
Key words:
Tyto alba; sound localization; hearing
impairment; development; sensory experience; superior colliculus; inferior colliculus
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INTRODUCTION |
The barn owl's optic tectum and its
mammalian homolog, the superior colliculus, contain maps of both visual
and auditory space (Gordon, 1973 ; Updyke, 1974 ; Harris et al., 1980 ;
Knudsen, 1982 ; King and Palmer, 1983 ; Middlebrooks and Knudsen, 1984 ).
Unlike the visual map, which arises from topographic projections from the retina, the auditory map is derived in a series of stages from
information about the timing, level, and spectra of sounds that arrive
at the two ears. This derivation is complicated by the fact that the
values of these cues depend not only on the location of a sound source,
but on the physical characteristics of the listener and the frequency
content of the sound, as well. To help account for variability in the
values of these cues, the response properties of tectal neurons tuned
to auditory space are calibrated by experience (Knudsen, 1983a , 1985 ;
King et al., 1988 , 1994 ; Knudsen and Brainard, 1991 ; Gold and Knudsen,
1999 ). In the present study, we investigated whether changes in tectal unit response properties that result from auditory experience reflect
plasticity intrinsic to the tectum itself or plasticity that occurs at
an earlier site in the ascending auditory pathway.
Previous studies have demonstrated that adjustments in binaural
response properties that result from different sensory manip-ulations can occur in the ascending pathway before the level of the optic tectum. For example, raising owls with a chronic monaural occlusion causes changes in the representation of interaural level difference (ILD) in the posterior division of the ventral nucleus of the lateral
lemniscus, the first site of interaural level comparison in the owl's
brainstem (Mogdans and Knudsen, 1994 ). These changes are smaller in
magnitude but are in the same direction as those that occur in the
optic tecta of the same owls (Mogdans and Knudsen, 1992 ). Moreover,
raising owls with prismatic spectacles that optically shift the visual
field results in a systematic shift in the tuning of units for
interaural time difference (ITD) in the external nucleus of the
inferior colliculus (ICX); a matching shift is observed in the tectum,
which receives direct, ascending input from the ICX (Brainard and
Knudsen, 1993 ).
In this study, we caused frequency-dependent changes in the auditory
localization cues experienced by young owls by raising them with an
acoustic filtering device in one ear. This manipulation induces
adaptive, frequency-dependent changes in the auditory spatial tuning of
tectal neurons that reflect, in part, changes in their tuning for ITD
and frequency (Gold and Knudsen, 1999 , 2000 ). We analyzed the effects
of device rearing on the representations of ITD and frequency in the
two nuclei immediately preceding the tectum in the ascending auditory
pathway, the ICX and the lateral shell of the central nucleus of the
inferior colliculus (ICCls) (Fig. 1). The
results indicate that, like prism rearing, device rearing has little
effect on the functional organization of the ICCls but causes dramatic
changes in the ICX. This device-induced plasticity can largely account
for the changes in both ITD and frequency tuning that are observed in
the optic tectum.

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Figure 1.
The ascending ITD pathway leading to the
optic tectum (OT) (adapted from Brainard and
Knudsen, 1993 ). A, Block diagram of the principal nuclei
involved in the processing of timing information. All nuclei are
bilaterally symmetrical. Vertical tick marks indicate
tonotopic organization. Frequency-specific timing information is
conveyed from each nucleus magnocellularis (NM)
to the nucleus laminaris (NL), the first site of
interaural phase comparison (Sullivan and Konishi, 1986 ; Carr and
Konishi, 1988 , 1990 ). The NL projects contralaterally to the core
subdivision of the central nucleus of the inferior colliculus
(Takahashi and Konishi, 1988 ), which projects, in turn, to the
contralateral ICC lateral shell (Takahashi et al., 1989 ). Within
the ICCcore and ICCls, individual neurons are tuned for IPD, and a
given dorsoventral array of neurons represents a single ITD value
across the range of best frequencies (Wagner et al., 1987 ). Timing
information from the ICCls converges across frequency channels in the
external nucleus of the inferior colliculus
(ICX), where neurons are organized with respect
to their binaural tuning properties to form a physiological map of
auditory space (Knudsen, 1983b ; Wagner et al., 1987 ). The ICX space map
is conveyed via point-to-point projections to the optic tectum (Knudsen
and Knudsen, 1983 ). B, Schematic diagram of a horizontal
section cut parallel to the long axis of the optic tectum (see
inset), illustrating the representation of ITD in the
optic tectum, ICX, and ICCls. Best ITD varies systematically along the
rostrocaudal axis of each nucleus, such that ITD values normally
produced by sound sources located in frontal space (near 0 µsec) are
represented rostrally, whereas increasingly contralateral-ear-leading values are
represented more caudally (Moiseff and Konishi, 1981a ; Wagner et al.,
1987 ; Olsen et al., 1989 ). In the ICCcore, 0 µsec ITD is represented
rostrally and increasingly ipsilateral-ear-leading values are
represented more caudally.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Eight barn owls (Tyto alba) raised with an acoustic
filtering device in the right ear and five normal owls were used in
this study. All of the owls were used in previous studies (Gold and Knudsen, 1999 , 2000 ). The owls were provided for in accordance with the
National Institutes of Health Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory
Animals and the guidelines of the Stanford University Institutional
Animal Care and Use Committee.
Auditory manipulation. An acoustic filtering device placed
chronically in one ear canal was used to alter auditory experience. The
device was a custom-designed chamber made from acetal delrin (Plastics
SRT) that was sutured into the right ear canal and rested just behind
the preaural flap and in front of the facial ruff feathers (the owl's
ear canals are asymmetrically positioned on its head, and the left ear
canal opens at an angle relative to the facial ruff feathers that makes
it difficult to place the device on the left side). A more detailed
description of the device, including cochlear microphonic measurements
of its frequency-specific effects on sound timing and level, can be
found in Gold and Knudsen (1999) .
Owls raised with the device were first binaurally occluded with dense
foam rubber earplugs (E.A.R. Cabot Corporation) from 25-35 d of age to
limit auditory experience while their ear canals were open but not yet
large enough to accommodate the acoustic device. At the end of this
period, the binaural foam plugs were removed, and the acoustic device
was sutured into the right ear canal. The owls were anesthetized with
halothane (1%) in a mixture of oxygen and nitrous oxide (5:4) while
the earplugs and the acoustic device were sutured in place.
All owls were initially raised in brooding boxes with their siblings.
After the device was inserted, each owl was placed in an individual
cage located next to a large flight cage that housed many adult owls,
providing a rich visual and auditory environment. When the owl could
fly, at ~60 d of age, it was placed in the large flight cage.
Electrophysiology. Each owl was prepared for
electrophysiological measurements in a single surgical session during
which it was anesthetized with halothane and nitrous oxide. A small,
stainless steel plate was cemented to the base of the skull for
securing the head in a stereotaxic apparatus, and small craniotomies
were made above the optic tectum and inferior colliculus (IC) on
each side of the brain. The craniotomies were covered with dental
acrylic, which was removed and replaced for each recording session. At the end of the procedure, the tissues surrounding all incisions were
infused with lidocaine, treated with betadine, and sutured back together.
At the beginning of each recording session, the owl was anesthetized
with halothane and nitrous oxide, wrapped in a soft leather jacket, and
given an intramuscular injection of 3 ml of 2.5% dextrose in 0.45%
sterile saline. The acoustic device was removed, and the ear canal and
eardrum were inspected for damage and cleaned of earwax. The owl was
suspended in a prone position in a stereotaxic apparatus in a
sound-attenuating chamber (Industrial Acoustics Company, model 404A)
lined with acoustic foam to suppress echoes, and its head was
positioned using retinal landmarks (the barn owl's eyes are
essentially fixed in its head).
Except during the ~20 min of set-up, the owl was unanesthetized and
typically remained calm and motionless during the course of the
experiment. Occasionally, however, the owl became active, at which time
recording was suspended while a brief dose of halothane and nitrous
oxide or nitrous oxide alone was administered.
Electrophysiological measurements were made extracellularly using
tungsten microelectrodes that were stereotaxically positioned and
advanced with a mechanical microdrive. A level discriminator was used
to isolate action potentials generated by one neuron or a small group
of neurons at each recording site, and a computer stored the times of
these action potentials relative to stimulus onset time.
At the end of each recording session, the craniotomy was bathed in
chloramphenicol (0.5%) and resealed with dental acrylic, and the
device was sutured back into place. The owl was kept warm with a heat
lamp until it had fully recovered (usually 1-2 hr) and then was
returned to its home flight cage.
Auditory measurements. Computer-generated stimuli were
presented through a pair of matched Knowles subminiature earphones (ED-1914) coupled to damping assemblies (BF-1743). The earphones were
placed in the ear canals ~5 mm from the tympanic membranes with the
device removed. The amplitude and phase spectra of the earphones were
equalized to within ±2 dB and ±2 µsec, respectively, from 1 to 12 kHz by computer adjustments of the stimulus waveforms. Sound levels
were calibrated using A-weighted signals from a Bruel and Kjær
half-inch condenser microphone positioned 1 cm from the earphone.
Bursts of broadband noise had rise/fall times of 0 msec and a passband
of 3-12 kHz, the lower bound set to minimize propagation through the
interaural canal (Moiseff and Konishi, 1981b ). Bursts of narrowband
noise (50 msec duration) were generated with a 1 kHz-wide digital
filter centered on the given frequency; these and pure tone bursts had
linear rise/fall times of 5 msec.
The response to a sound presentation was defined as the number of
spikes counted in the 100 msec immediately after stimulus onset
(post-stimulus response) minus the number of spikes counted in the 100 msec immediately preceding stimulus onset (baseline activity). Response
threshold was defined as the lowest average binaural level at which the
response to a given stimulus was at least 25% of the maximum response
evoked at any level up to 70 dB sound pressure level. ITD, ILD, and
frequency tuning curves were generated by presenting stimuli 0.7-1.0
sec apart at 20-30 dB above threshold and collecting responses over
10-20 repetitions. For each tuning curve, the width of the maximum
response peak was defined as the uninterrupted range over which
responses were >50% of the maximum response. The midpoint of that
range was defined as the best value for the peak. For ITD tuning curves
with multiple peaks, the best value was taken from the peak nearest to
0 µsec ITD or, in the ICC, from the peak that was common to all units in a dorsoventral penetration, the array-specific ITD (Wagner et al.,
1987 ).
ITD tuning was measured by varying the interaural delay in 10-20
µsec intervals over a 100-300 µsec range of values between 250
and 250 µsec; positive and negative values indicate right- and
left-ear-leading ITDs, respectively. Stimuli were presented using the
best ILD for the given stimulus, which was measured by varying the ILD
in 2-4 dB intervals over a 15-40 dB range of values between 30 and
30 dB at a fixed average binaural level.
Frequency-response functions were measured using both tonal and
narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli. Tonal stimuli were presented using the broadband best ITD and best ILD for that site and at 20-30
dB above the threshold measured for the lowest frequency (>3 kHz) that
elicited a response. Stimuli with a bandwidth of 1 kHz were presented
using the best ITD and best ILD and at 20-30 dB above the threshold
for the given stimulus.
The frequency dependence of ITD tuning was assessed in the optic
tectum, ICX, and ICCls. In the optic tectum and the ICX, neurons are
broadly tuned for frequency (Knudsen and Konishi, 1978 ; Knudsen, 1984a ;
Olsen et al., 1989 ; Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ). Therefore, ITD tuning
in those nuclei was measured using narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli
with different center frequencies, and the frequency dependence was
quantified as (1) the range of narrowband best ITDs measured for all
stimulus frequencies that yielded ITD tuning and (2) the difference
between narrowband best ITDs measured using stimulus center frequencies
between 3.5 and 4.5 kHz and those measured using higher frequencies, up
to 9 kHz (a positive or negative value indicates that the higher
frequency best ITD was more right- or left-ear leading, respectively,
than the ~4 kHz best ITD). In contrast, neurons in the ICCls are
narrowly tuned for frequency (Knudsen, 1984b ; Wagner et al., 1987 );
thus, the ITD tuning measured at a given ICCls site was specific to the
best frequency. In fact, at 14 ICCls sites, the best ITD measured using
a broadband stimulus was the same as the best ITD measured using a
narrowband stimulus with a passband that matched the frequency tuning
at that site (paired t test, p = 0.56).
Consequently, the frequency dependence of ITD tuning in the ICCls was
assessed by comparing broadband ITD tuning across sites along
dorsoventral electrode penetrations that traversed a wide range of the
frequency representation. For each electrode penetration, the frequency dependence of ITD tuning was quantified as (1) the range of best ITDs
compared with the range of best frequencies measured and (2) the
difference between the best ITDs measured at sites with best
frequencies between 3 and 4.5 kHz and those measured at sites with
higher best frequencies (a positive or negative value indicates that
the higher frequency best ITD was more right- or left-ear leading,
respectively, than the ~4 kHz best ITD).
Frequency-specific representations of ITD were analyzed in the optic
tectum, ICX, and ICCls. In the optic tectum, the representation of ITD
was determined relative to visual receptive field (RF) locations (Olsen
et al., 1989 ; Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ; Gold and Knudsen, 2000 ).
These were measured by projecting bars and spots of light onto a
calibrated, translucent hemisphere placed directly in front of the owl,
and their locations were quantified using a double-pole coordinate
system in which the visual axes defined 0° azimuth, 0° elevation
(Knudsen, 1982 ). In the ICX and ICCls, the representations of ITD were
determined based on the locations of recording sites reconstructed from
electrolytic lesions (Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ) (see Histology, below).
Targeting of nuclei. The optic tectum was targeted
stereotaxically and was recognized by characteristic bursting activity and spatially restricted visual and auditory RFs (Knudsen, 1982 ). Electrode position within the optic tectum was determined on the basis
of visual RF location. The ICCls and the ICX were targeted stereotaxically by positioning the electrode 2 mm medial, 3 mm caudal
relative to the tectal representation of 0° azimuth, +10° elevation. A number of criteria were used to distinguish between subdivisions of the IC, including stereotaxic position, response latency, and unit tuning to both frequency and ILD. The ICCls is
located medial to the ICX, and neurons in the ICCls respond, on
average, with a shorter latency than those in the ICX. Neurons in the
ICC are sharply tuned for frequency, and best frequency systematically
progresses from low to high with dorsoventral depth (along the
trajectory of the electrode penetration) (Knudsen and Konishi, 1978 ;
Wagner et al., 1987 ). In contrast, neurons in the ICX usually respond
to a broad range of frequencies, and there is no systematic progression
of best frequency with depth (Knudsen and Konishi, 1978 ). Many neurons
in the ICCls are tuned for ILD, but there is no apparent organization
according to ILD tuning (Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ). Neurons in the
ICX are tuned for ILD, and best ILDs change systematically with
recording depth from right-ear greater dorsally to left-ear greater
ventrally (Mogdans and Knudsen, 1993 ). As shown in Table
1, response latency, frequency tuning
width, and progression of best ILD with dorsoventral electrode depth
were unaffected by device rearing and differed significantly between
the ICX and ICCls. We verified our classifications of recording sites
based on these properties by reconstructing electrolytic lesions at 60 of the 653 sites tested.
Within the ICC, the lateral shell was distinguished from the core on
the basis of stereotaxic position and unit tuning to ITD and ILD.
Neurons in the ICCcore, which is located on the medial edge of
the ICCls, typically respond to ipsilateral-ear-leading ITD values
(neurons in the ICCls are tuned to contralateral-ear-leading values)
and exhibit little or no sensitivity to ILD (Wagner et al., 1987 ).
Histology. After electrophysiological measurements were
completed, the topography of ITD representation in the IC was mapped in
a single recording session. Electrolytic lesions were made by passing
3-5 µA of cathodal current through the recording electrode for 15 sec. After 5-12 d of survival, the owls were given an overdose of
sodium pentobarbital (300 mg/kg) and perfused through the heart with
formalin. Frozen sections, 40 µm thick, were cut in a horizontal plane parallel to the long axis of the optic tectum. Every third section was stained with cresyl violet to locate lesions, and alternate
sections were stained with an antibody for calcium binding protein-like
antigen (17E4F2, provided by C. E. Carr, Department of Zoology,
University of Maryland) to mark the ICCcore (Takahashi et al., 1987 ).
This material was used to correlate ITD tuning with recording site
location in the IC.
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RESULTS |
Raising owls with an acoustic filtering device in one ear causes
changes in ITD and frequency tuning in the optic tectum (Gold and
Knudsen, 2000 ). These changes, like the acoustic effects of the device
(Table 2), depend on frequency. We used
this frequency dependence to guide our investigation of whether the
changes in tectal unit tuning are intrinsic to the tectum or whether
they occur at an earlier stage in the ascending auditory pathway. We characterized the effects of device rearing on the frequency dependence of ITD tuning, frequency-specific maps of ITD, and frequency-response properties in the optic tectum. We then looked for similar effects in
the ICX and ICCls. Results from each nucleus are presented separately
below.
Optic tectum
Neurons in most regions of the optic tectum are broadly tuned for
frequency, typically responding to a 3-4 kHz range of frequencies centered between 5.5 and 7.5 kHz (Knudsen, 1984a ; Olsen et al., 1989 ).
Therefore, we assessed the frequency-dependent effects of device
rearing on the ITD tuning of tectal units by measuring ITD tuning at
individual sites using both a broadband (3-12 kHz) stimulus and
narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli centered on frequencies between 3 and 9 kHz. These data, which are from sites with visual RFs between
L25° and R25° azimuth and ±15° elevation, have been reported
previously (Gold and Knudsen, 2000 ) and are summarized below.
Frequency dependence of ITD tuning at individual sites
In normal owls, sounds produce ITD values that are nearly constant
across frequency for most of frontal space (Knudsen et al., 1991 ).
Accordingly, the best ITDs that we measured at single sites did not
vary substantially with stimulus frequency. Narrowband ITD tuning
curves were periodic, reflecting a comparison of interaural phase by
circuits earlier in the ITD pathway (Sullivan and Konishi, 1986 ; Carr
and Konishi, 1988 , 1990 ). Nevertheless, the narrowband ITD tuning
curves measured at individual sites using different center frequencies
were aligned such that each had a peak at a common best ITD, regardless
of stimulus frequency. As shown in Figure
2A, these tuning
curves, measured over a 2-6 kHz range of center frequencies, aligned
to within 24 µsec for all sites tested (n = 27).
Indeed, the best ITD for 4 kHz typically matched the best ITDs measured
with higher frequency, narrowband stimuli, up to 9 kHz (Fig.
2B).

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Figure 2.
Frequency dependence of ITD tuning in the optic
tecta of normal (A and B) and
device-reared (C and D) owls (data from
Gold and Knudsen, 2000 ). Analysis is restricted to sites with visual
RFs between R25° and L25° azimuth and ±15° elevation. Best ITDs
were measured using narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli centered on
various frequencies at individual tectal sites. A, The
range of best ITDs measured plotted with respect to the range of center
frequencies tested at each site. B, The difference
between the 4 kHz best ITD and the best ITDs measured at the same site
using the given center frequency of the stimulus, binned as indicated.
Thick lines, boxes, and
bars indicate medians, quartiles, and 10th/90th
percentiles, respectively. C, D, Data
from device-reared owls, plotted as described for
A and B, respectively.
D, An asterisk by the stimulus frequency
indicates that the data for that frequency differed significantly from
the corresponding data in B (Mann-Whitney
U test, p < 0.01).
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In contrast, owls wearing the device experience ITD values that depend
strongly on frequency (Table 2). Accordingly, the best ITDs that we
measured at single sites in device-reared owls varied substantially
with stimulus frequency. Narrowband ITD tuning curves were typically
periodic, as in normal owls, but for most sites they did not have
mutually aligned peaks when measured with different stimulus
frequencies. For 77 sites, narrowband best ITDs, measured using a 1-6
kHz range of stimulus center frequencies, had ranges of up to 145 µsec (Fig. 2C). The differences between the best ITDs at 4 kHz and those measured using higher frequencies were in many cases >75
µsec (Fig. 2D); for frequencies near 7 and 8 kHz,
this quantity was significantly greater than normal (Mann-Whitney
U test, p < 0.01).
Map of ITD
Device-induced changes in the tectal map of ITD were quantified by
comparing unit best ITDs with predicted normal values for both
broadband and narrowband stimuli (Table
3). For broadband stimuli, predicted
normal best ITDs were based on the systematic relationship between best
ITD and visual RF azimuth in normal owls that has been reported
previously (Olsen et al., 1989 ; Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ) and is
illustrated in Figure 3, A and
B. For narrowband stimuli (Fig. 3C), predicted
normal best ITD was defined as the frequency-specific, acoustic ITD
produced in normal owls by a source located at the center of the visual
RF of the given site (data from Knudsen et al., 1991 ). In normal owls,
narrowband best ITDs matched these predicted values to within 30 µsec
at all sites tested.

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Figure 3.
Representation of ITD in the optic tecta of normal
(A-C) and device-reared
(D-F) owls (data from Gold and
Knudsen, 2000 ). Analysis is restricted to sites with visual RFs between
R25° and L25° azimuth and ±15° elevation. A, Best
ITD for a broadband (3-12 kHz) stimulus and narrowband (1 kHz
bandwidth) stimuli centered on 4, 6, and 8 kHz plotted as a function of
visual RF azimuth. The line is a linear fit to the
broadband data (y = 2.4x + 0.2, r2 = 0.89; ANOVA,
p < 0.01). B, Histogram of the
residuals of broadband best ITDs relative to the linear fit in
A. C, Best ITD measured using a 1 kHz-wide stimulus
relative to the predicted normal value plotted as a function of the
center stimulus frequency. Predicted normal was defined as the acoustic
ITD produced in normal owls by a source located at the center of the
visual RF of the site for the given frequency (acoustic data from
Knudsen et al., 1991 ). D-F, Data from
device-reared owls, plotted as described for
A-C, respectively. D, The
bold crosses represent data from sites with broadband
ITD tuning curves with two discrete peaks. The dashed
line indicates the normal, broadband regression from A.
E, For sites that exhibited two discrete ITD response peaks,
both peaks are included in this plot. Median = 44 µsec
(downward arrowhead). F, The
dashed line and shaded region represent
the median values and ranges, respectively, of phase-equivalent shifts
in the timing of sound reaching the right eardrum caused by insertion
of the acoustic filtering device (cochlear microphonic measurements
from five owls; Gold and Knudsen, 1999 ).
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Device rearing caused frequency-dependent shifts in the tectal map of
ITD (Fig. 3D). For broadband stimuli, ITD tuning curves often had multiple peaks, and best ITDs were shifted significantly (Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.01) from
predicted normal values by a median value of 44 µsec (Fig.
3E). For narrowband stimuli, best ITDs were also shifted
from predicted normal values (Fig. 3F). The direction
and magnitude of these shifts depended on the stimulus frequency, with
median shifts of 55 µsec toward open-ear leading at 4 kHz and 23 µsec toward affected-ear leading at 8 kHz. These shifts matched
roughly the effects of the device on sound timing (Fig. 3F,
shaded region; Table 2).
Frequency responses
Frequency-response functions measure the effect of
stimulus frequency on the strength of neural responses. When these
functions are measured using dichotic stimuli with constant ITD and ILD values, they reflect both the spectral sensitivity of a unit and its
tuning for ITD and ILD. The effect of ITD and ILD tuning on frequency-response functions is minimal for most neurons in the optic
tecta of normal owls, however, because they are typically tuned to
values of ITD and ILD that do not vary with stimulus frequency. In
contrast, tectal neurons in device-reared owls are tuned to values of
ITD and ILD that depend strongly on stimulus frequency (Gold and
Knudsen, 2000 ). Therefore, to account for possible effects of stimulus
ITD and ILD on frequency-response functions, we assessed responses to
narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli using the best ITD and best ILD
measured for each stimulus.
Device rearing changed the spectral sensitivity of neurons in the optic
tectum (Gold and Knudsen, 1999 , 2000 ). In normal owls, tectal neurons
responded robustly to all frequencies between ~4 and 9 kHz, with the
strongest responses to stimuli near 6 kHz (Fig.
4A), which is
consistent with previously published reports (Knudsen, 1984a ; Olsen et
al., 1989 ). In device-reared owls, tectal neurons also responded
robustly to stimuli near 4 and 8 kHz. However, responses to stimuli
near 6 and 7 kHz were typically <40% of the maximum response elicited
by any narrowband stimulus at a given site. This relative response
level was significantly below that observed in the normal owls (Fig.
4B).

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Figure 4.
Frequency responses in the optic tecta of normal
(A) and device-reared (B)
owls (data from Gold and Knudsen, 2000 ). Analysis is restricted to
sites with visual RFs between R25° and L25° azimuth and ±15°
elevation. Strength of response to the best ITD/ILD pair for a
narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimulus, normalized to the maximum
response elicited by any such narrowband stimulus at the same recording
site, is plotted as a function of the center frequency of the stimulus.
Thick lines, boxes, and
bars indicate medians, quartiles, and 10th/90th
percentiles, respectively. B, An asterisk
by the stimulus frequency indicates that the data for that frequency
differed significantly from the corresponding data in A
(Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.01).
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External nucleus of the inferior colliculus
Like neurons in the optic tectum, neurons in the ICX are broadly
tuned for frequency (Knudsen, 1984b ). Therefore, we assessed ITD tuning
at individual ICX sites using a broadband stimulus and narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli centered on various frequencies between 3.5 and
8 kHz. These data indicate device-induced changes in ITD and frequency
tuning similar to those found in the optic tectum.
Frequency dependence of ITD tuning at individual sites
Figure 5 illustrates broadband and
narrowband ITD tuning curves measured at individual sites in the ICX of
a normal and a device-reared owl. For the site in the normal owl (Fig.
5A), the broadband ITD tuning curve had a single peak with a
best value of 48 µsec. Narrowband stimuli centered on frequencies
between 3.5 and 7.5 kHz, all of which elicited robust responses,
produced ITD tuning curves with best values between 34 and 40
µsec. In contrast, for the site in the device-reared owl (Fig.
5B), the broadband ITD tuning curve had two peaks, with best
values of 171 and 35 µsec, respectively. Moreover, narrowband ITD
tuning varied substantially with stimulus center frequency: for stimuli centered on 3.5 and 4.5 kHz, best ITDs were near 100 µsec; for stimuli centered on 5.5 kHz, no responses could be elicited at any ITD
(range of ILDs tested: 24 to 24 dB); and for stimuli centered on 6.5 and 7.5 kHz, ITD tuning curves, which were periodic because of a
comparison of interaural phase earlier in the pathway, had best values
near 40 µsec.

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Figure 5.
Frequency-specific ITD tuning for a site in the
ICX of a normal (A) and a device-reared
(B) owl. Broadband (3-12 kHz,
curves shown in bold) responses were
normalized relative to the maximum response elicited with the broadband
stimulus at that site. Narrowband (the range of stimulus frequencies is
shown for each curve) responses were normalized relative to the maximum
response elicited with any narrowband stimulus at that site.
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As the examples in Figure 5 illustrate, device rearing affected the
frequency dependence of ITD tuning in the ICX. Figure 6A shows the
relationship between narrowband best ITD and stimulus center frequency
for individual sites in normal owls. In all cases, narrowband best ITD
was nearly constant as a function of center frequency: narrowband best
ITDs measured over a 3 or 4 kHz range of center frequencies between 3.5 and 8 kHz were within a 28 µsec range at individual sites (Fig.
6B). At these sites, best ITDs at 4 kHz were nearly
the same as best ITDs measured using narrowband stimuli centered at
higher frequencies (Fig. 6C). This ITD tuning matches the
frequency-independent acoustic ITDs that correspond to the regions of
frontal space that these neurons represent (Knudsen et al., 1991 ).

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Figure 6.
Frequency dependence of ITD tuning in the ICX of
normal (A-C) and device-reared
(D-F) owls. A,
Best ITD for narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli plotted as a function
of the center frequency of the stimulus. Each line
represents data from a single recording site. Crosses
represent data from Figure 5A. B, For
each line shown in A, the range of best
ITDs plotted with respect to the range of stimulus center frequencies
tested. C, The difference between the 4 kHz best ITD and
the best ITDs measured at the same site using the given center
frequency, binned as indicated. Thick lines,
boxes, and bars indicate medians,
quartiles, and 10th/90th percentiles, respectively.
D-E, Data from device-reared owls,
plotted as described for A-C,
respectively. D, Crosses represent data
from Figure 5B. The open symbols
represent frequencies that were tested but did not elicit strong enough
responses to measure ITD tuning at the given site; each of these
symbols is drawn on the line connecting
data collected from the given site. F, An
asterisk by the stimulus frequency indicates that the
data for that frequency differed significantly from the corresponding
data in C (Mann-Whitney U test,
p < 0.01).
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In contrast, narrowband best ITD varied substantially with stimulus
center frequency for individual sites in the ICX of device-reared owls
(Fig. 6D). Narrowband best ITDs measured over a 2-4
kHz range covered an 8-100 µsec range (Fig. 6E).
These ranges reflected significant changes in the relative values of
best ITDs measured at individual sites using different center
frequencies (Fig. 6F). This abnormal frequency
dependence of ITD tuning was consistent with the acoustic effects of
the device (Table 2).
Map of ITD
In the optic tectum, broadband and narrowband ITD tuning at a
given site can be predicted reliably from the location of the visual RF
(Olsen et al., 1989 ; Gold and Knudsen, 2000 ). In the ICX, there is no
such physiological marker of predicted normal ITD tuning. Instead, the
map of ITD in the ICX has been determined by correlating best ITDs with
recording site locations reconstructed from electrolytic lesions
(Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ). An example of this type of lesion is
shown in Figure 7A, which
depicts the reconstruction of a recording site in the lateral portion
of the right ICX in a normal owl with a best ITD of 50 µsec. A
summary of lesion reconstruction data from normal owls is shown in
Figure 7B, in which broadband best ITD is plotted as a
function of rostrocaudal location in the ICX of normal owls. These data
show that broadband best ITD progresses systematically along the
rostrocaudal axis of the ICX (Fig. 1B), such that
rostral portions of the nucleus represent values near 0 µsec, which
are produced by sources located in frontal space, and progressively
caudal portions of the ICX represent increasingly
contralateral-ear-leading values (note that in Fig.
7B,D,E, best ITDs are
plotted as ipsilateral- and contralateral-ear-leading values). This
representation of broadband ITD holds true for narrowband ITD as well,
because broadband best ITDs closely match narrowband best ITDs at
individual sites in normal owls (Table
4).

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Figure 7.
Representation of ITD in the ICX of normal
(A, B) and device-reared
(C-E) owls. A,
Nissl-stained, horizontal section through the ICX showing a recording
site, marked by a lesion (circled), at which ITD tuning
was measured. Recording location was quantified as the percentage of
distance from the rostral to the caudal pole of the ICX. At this site,
the broadband best ITD = 50 µsec; narrowband best ITDs = 54 and 46 µsec for 4 and 8 kHz stimuli, respectively.
B, Best ITD for a broadband stimulus as a function of
rostrocaudal location in the ICX. Data from the left and right side of
the brain are included. Plain and bold
labels represent ipsilateral- and contralateral-ear-leading
values, respectively. Thin circles represent data from
Brainard and Knudsen (1993) . The filled circle indicates
data from the site shown in A. The solid
line is a second-order polynomial fit to the data
(r2 = 0.92; ANOVA,
p < 0.001). C, Reconstruction of an
ICX recording site in a device-reared owl. At this site, the broadband
best ITD = 95 µsec; narrowband best ITDs = 97 and 35
µsec for 4 and 8 kHz stimuli, respectively. D,
E, Best ITD as a function of rostrocaudal location in
the left (D) and right (E)
ICX of device-reared owls. Stimulus frequencies refer to the center
frequency of a narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimulus or to a broadband
(3-12 kHz) stimulus. Recording site locations were determined either
by recovery of lesions (bold symbols) or by estimation
based on microdrive coordinates relative to recovered lesions
(thin symbols). Plain and bold
labels represent ipsilateral- and contralateral-ear-leading
values, respectively. The filled symbols in
E indicate data from the site shown in C.
The dashed line in each panel is the fit to normal data
(see A).
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In device-reared owls, reconstruction of electrolytic lesions revealed
abnormal representations of both broadband and narrowband ITD in the
ICX. Figure 7C depicts the reconstruction of a recording site in the ICX of a device-reared owl. As documented in Figure 7,
D and E, and Table 4, lesion-reconstruction data
showed that both broadband and narrowband best ITDs were shifted
relative to the normal regression of broadband best ITD on rostrocaudal location in the ICX (from Fig. 7B). On average, the shifts
in the left and right ICX were 63 and 52 µsec, respectively, toward open-ear leading for stimuli near 4 kHz and 8 and 11 µsec,
respectively, in the opposite direction for stimuli near 8 kHz. These
shifts were similar to those observed in the tectum (Table 3) (Gold and
Knudsen, 2000 ) and correspond reasonably well with the average acoustic
effects of the device (Table 2).
Frequency responses
Frequency-response properties were abnormal in the ICX of
device-reared owls. Figure 8 depicts
frequency-response functions measured in the ICX of normal and
device-reared owls using dichotic stimuli with the broadband best ITD
and best ILD for the given site. In normal owls, these functions
typically had a single peak with a median best frequency of 6.4 kHz
[with an interquartile range (IQR) of 1.0 kHz] that did not vary with
dorsoventral depth (Fig. 8A,B;
Table 1). In contrast, frequency-response functions measured in device-reared owls had either multiple peaks (Fig. 8C) or peaks with best values that varied with stimulus ITD
for 11 of 63 sites. The distribution of best frequencies from all peaks
for all recording sites in the ICX of device-reared owls was roughly
bimodal, with peaks at ~3.5 and 7.0 kHz (Fig. 8D). Unlike in normal owls, there was also a tendency for best frequency to
increase with dorsoventral depth (Fig. 8C; Table 1).

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Figure 8.
Frequency responses in the ICX of normal
(A, B) and device-reared
(C, D) owls. A, Frequency
tuning curves measured at sites in a single dorsoventral penetration
through the ICX. The legend indicates depth of the given recording site
relative to the most superficial site. In order of increasing
dorsoventral depth, the best frequencies were 5.8, 6.4, and 6.5 kHz.
B, Distribution of best frequencies from 23 sites in
four normal owls. For one site, the frequency tuning curve had two
peaks; both best values are included. Median = 6.4 kHz
(downward arrowhead), IQR = 1.0 kHz.
C, D, Data from device-reared owls,
plotted as described for A and B,
respectively. C, At the most superficial site, neurons
responded robustly to frequencies between 1 and 4 kHz and around 7.5 kHz. At the middle site, neurons responded only to around 7 kHz. At the
deepest site, neurons responded best to between 7 and 9 kHz and at
~50% of maximum between 3 and 7 kHz. D, For 11 sites,
frequency tuning curves either had multiple peaks or a peak that
depended on stimulus ITD; best values from all such peaks are included.
Median = 5.2 kHz (downward arrowhead), IQR = 3.3 kHz.
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However, as in the optic tectum, these frequency-response functions
measured using constant ITD and ILD values reflected both the spectral
sensitivity and the binaural tuning of units in the ICX. To account for
possible effects of stimulus ITD and ILD on these measurements, we also
assessed frequency responses using narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli
with the best ITD and best ILD optimized for each frequency range. In
normal owls, these frequency-response functions indicated robust
responses to all stimuli between 3.5 and 8.0 kHz, with strongest
responses to stimuli above 5 kHz (responses from a single site are
illustrated in Fig. 9A; data
from all sites tested are summarized in Fig. 9B).

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Figure 9.
Responses to narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimuli
in the ICX of normal (A, B) and
device-reared (C, D) owls. All responses
were measured using the best ITD/ILD pair and 20-30 dB above threshold
for the given narrowband stimulus. A, Raster display
representing trial-by-trial responses to a stimulus with the given
center frequency during the 100 msec after stimulus onset. Five
repetitions per stimulus are shown. B, Strength of
response to a narrowband stimulus, normalized to the maximum response
elicited by any such narrowband stimulus at the same recording site,
plotted as a function of the center frequency of the stimulus.
Thick lines, boxes, and
bars indicate medians, quartiles, and 10th/90th
percentiles, respectively. C, D, Data
from device-reared owls, plotted as described for A and
B, respectively. D, An
asterisk by the stimulus frequency indicates that the
data for that frequency differed significantly from the corresponding
data in B (Mann-Whitney U test,
p < 0.01).
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Frequency-response functions measured using the best ITD and best ILD
for each narrowband (1 kHz bandwidth) stimulus were abnormal in
device-reared owls. For the site illustrated in Figure 9C,
the responses to stimuli near 4 and 8 kHz were much stronger than the
responses to stimuli near 6 kHz. In general, responses to stimuli below
5 kHz and above 7 kHz were robust, whereas responses to stimuli near 6 and 7 kHz were weak. In fact, responses to stimuli near 6 and 7 kHz
were typically <60% of the maximum response elicited by any
narrowband stimulus at the given site, a difference from normal that
was statistically significant (Mann-Whitney U test, p < 0.01) (Fig. 9D). These data indicate
that device rearing modified the spectral sensitivity of neurons in the ICX.
Short-latency shifted responses
The shifts in ITD tuning measured in the ICX of device-reared owls
could result from plasticity in the ascending ITD pathway from the ICC
or from plasticity in other, less direct pathways such as from the
forebrain or cerebellum. To test the hypothesis that ITD tuning shifts
were caused, at least in part, by plasticity in the direct, ascending
pathway from the ICCls, we assessed frequency-specific ITD tuning
measured in the earliest responses of ICX neurons (<10 msec after
stimulus) (Fig. 10).

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Figure 10.
ITD tuning of early versus late responses in the
ICX of device-reared owls. A, B,
Responses as a function of stimulus ITD (top) and
post-stimulus time (bottom). The ITD tuning curves were
measured from the first 10 msec post-stimulus time (indicated with a
horizontal line on the raster plot) or from the
remainder of the responses. Data are from a single recording site in
the ICX, using narrowband stimuli as indicated. C,
D, For sites in the ICX of device-reared owls, best ITD
calculated from the earliest part of the response plotted as a function
of the best ITD calculated from the remainder of the response. Data are
indicated separately for sites at which ITD tuning could be determined
within the first 8 msec of stimulus onset ( ) or within the first 10 msec of stimulus onset ( ). The dashed lines indicate
no difference between early and late best ITDs. C,
Narrowband stimuli centered between 3 and 5 kHz. D,
Narrowband stimuli centered between 7 and 9 kHz.
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We compared narrowband ITD tuning for 4 and 8 kHz stimuli derived from
early versus late responses. For 4 kHz stimuli, best ITD could be
determined within the first 8 msec after stimulus onset for 6 of 45 sites. For these sites, the best ITD measured during this early part of
the response was not significantly different from the best ITD measured
during the remaining 92 msec (paired t test,
p = 0.41). For 17 of the remaining 39 sites, best ITD could be determined within 10 msec after stimulus onset. For these sites, the best ITD measured from the early responses was slightly more
right-ear leading (and thus less adaptively shifted), by 9 ± 14 µsec (mean ± SD), than the best ITD measured from the remainder of the response (p = 0.02). For 8 kHz stimuli,
best ITD could be determined within the first 8 msec after stimulus
onset for 25 of 45 sites and within the first 10 msec after stimulus
onset for six of the remaining sites. For these sites, best ITD
measured from the early response did not differ significantly
(p > 0.05) from the best ITD measured from the
remainder of the response.
Thus, for low-frequency stimuli there was in some cases a tendency for
late responses to be more shifted than early responses, but this
difference could account for only a small fraction of the overall shift
of ~60 µsec. For high-frequency stimuli, there was no difference in
ITD tuning between early and late responses. These data are consistent
with the hypothesis that plasticity in the representation of ITD
occurred in the direct, ascending pathway to the ICX.
Central nucleus of the inferior colliculus, lateral
shell subdivision
Neurons in the ICCls are narrowly tuned for frequency. Therefore,
frequency-specific ITD tuning could not be measured at individual ICCls
sites using a broad range of frequencies, as it could be in the optic
tectum and the ICX. However, neurons in the ICCls are organized with
respect to their frequency and ITD tuning (Fig. 11). Neurons aligned approximately in
the horizontal plane are tuned to the same frequency. Within such an
isofrequency lamina, neurons are organized with respect to their tuning
for interaural phase difference, such that the phase equivalent of 0 µsec ITD is represented rostrally and more contralateral-ear-leading
values are represented more caudally. Across frequency laminae, neurons are aligned according to their interaural phase difference tuning so
that a given value of ITD maximally activates a dorsoventral array of
neurons. The ITD represented by these neurons is referred to as the
array-specific ITD (Wagner et al., 1987 ). Therefore, to assess the
representation of ITD in the ICCls, we measured ITD tuning along
dorsoventral electrode penetrations that traversed populations of
neurons that, in normal owls, are tuned to different frequencies but to
a single, array-specific ITD. These data indicate that device rearing
did not substantially affect the representations of ITD and frequency
in the ICCls.

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Figure 11.
Schematic of the representation of ITD and
frequency in the ICCls. Neurons in the ICCls are narrowly tuned for
frequency, the value of which increases systematically along the
dorsoventral axis of the nucleus. Within each isofrequency lamina,
neurons are tuned for interaural phase difference, but a single ITD
maximally excites a dorsoventrally aligned array of neurons. Our
electrode penetrations (arrow) progressed along this
iso-ITD axis.
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Frequency dependence of ITD tuning along individual
electrode penetrations
Device rearing did not affect the pattern of ITD tuning along
individual dorsoventral electrode penetrations through the ICCls. In
both normal and device-reared owls, ICCls neurons had ITD tuning curves
that were periodic, reflecting their tuning for interaural phase
difference within the narrow ranges of frequencies to which they were
tuned. Figure 12 illustrates the
frequency and ITD tuning of neurons along a dorsoventral penetration
through the ICCls in a normal owl. Best frequency progressed
systematically from 2.1 to 7.5 kHz with increasing depth, and best ITD
remained relatively constant at ~80 µsec contralateral-ear leading.
Figure 13 illustrates similar data from
a device-reared owl. In this case, best frequency progressed
systematically from 1.5 to 7.5 kHz, and best ITD remained relatively
constant at ~85 µsec contralateral-ear leading.

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Figure 12.
ITD and frequency tuning along a dorsoventral
electrode penetration through the ICCls in a normal owl. Each row
illustrates the broadband ITD tuning (left) and the
frequency tuning (right) for a site along the
penetration at the relative depth indicated in the
center. Each curve is normalized to the maximum response
of that curve. Note that peaks in the ITD tuning curves recur at
integer multiples of the period corresponding to the best frequency of
the neuron, because these neurons are tuned to interaural phase
differences (Wagner et al., 1987 ).
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Figure 13.
ITD and frequency tuning along a dorsoventral
electrode penetration through the ICCls in a device-reared owl. Each
row illustrates the broadband ITD tuning (left) and the
frequency tuning (right) for a site along the
penetration at the relative depth indicated in the center. Each curve
is normalized to the maximum response of that curve. Note that peaks in
the ITD tuning curves recur at integer multiples of the period
corresponding to the best frequency of the neuron, because these
neurons are tuned to interaural phase differences (Wagner et al.,
1987 ).
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Figure 14 summarizes the relationship
between best frequency and best ITD at sites along individual
dorsoventral penetrations through the ICCls in normal and device-reared
owls. In normal owls (Fig. 14A,B),
the variation of best ITDs measured along a given penetration ranged
from 0 to 70 µsec, with a median value of 18 µsec (IQR = 27 µsec, n = 39). In device-reared owls (Fig. 14D,E), the variation of best ITDs
ranged from 1 to 105 µsec, with a median value of 26 µsec (IQR = 27 µsec, n = 80), for penetrations that traversed
comparable ranges of frequency representations. Moreover, the
differences between the best ITDs of sites tuned to low frequencies
(between 3 and 4.5 kHz) and those tuned to higher frequencies along
individual electrode penetrations were not significantly different
between normal and device-reared owls (Mann-Whitney U test,
p > 0.05) (Fig.
14C,F).

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Figure 14.
The frequency dependence of ITD tuning in
individual dorsoventral electrode penetrations through the ICCls in
normal (A-C) and device-reared
(D-F) owls. A,
Best ITD as a function of best frequency at individual recording sites.
Each line represents data from sites in a single
dorsoventral penetration. Crosses represent data from
Figure 12. B, For each line shown in
A, the range of best ITDs plotted with respect to the
range of best frequencies. C, The difference between the
mean best ITD from sites tuned to between 3 and 4.5 kHz and the best
ITD measured at a site along the same electrode penetration with the
given best frequency, binned as indicated. Thick lines,
boxes, and bars indicate medians,
quartiles, and 10th/90th percentiles, respectively.
E-F, Data from device-reared owls,
plotted as described for A-C,
respectively. D, Crosses represent data
from Figure 13. F, The data for each frequency did not
differ significantly from the corresponding data in C
(Mann-Whitney U test, p > 0.05).
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Map of ITD
The relationship between best ITD and rostrocaudal location in the
ICCls has been well characterized for neurons in the 6 kHz isofrequency
lamina (Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ). Figure
15B shows this relationship
in normal owls. We found the same relationship in owls raised with the
acoustic device (Fig. 15A,C):
second-order polynomial fits to the normal and device-reared data did
not differ significantly (ANCOVA,
F(3,50) = 1.83, p = 0.153).

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Figure 15.
Representation of ITD in the ICCls of normal
(B) and device-reared (A,
C) owls. A, The image depicts a
horizontal section through the right ICC of a device-reared owl with
the core immunohistochemically stained with an antibody to calbindin.
The ICCcore (darkly stained circular region) served as
an anatomical reference for quantifying the locations of recording
sites in the ICCls. The locations of lesions (circled)
were quantified as percentages of the distance from the rostral to the
caudal end of the core. B, Best ITD measured in the 6 kHz lamina of normal owls as a function of rostrocaudal position of the
recording site relative to the ICCcore borders. Recording site
locations were determined either by lesion reconstruction (bold
symbols) or by estimation based on microdrive coordinates
relative to recovered lesions. Data from the left and right side of the
brain are included. Plain and bold labels
represent ipsilateral- and contralateral-ear-leading values,
respectively. Open symbols represent previously
published data (Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ). The solid
line is a second-order polynomial fit to the data
(r2 = 0.83; ANOVA,
p < 0.001). C, Representation of
ITD in the ICCls of device-reared owls, plotted in the same format as
in B. Data from the right and left side of the brain are
depicted as squares and circles,
respectively. Solid symbols indicate best ITDs measured
at the two sites depicted in A. The dashed
line is the fit to the normal data derived in
B.
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Because the representation of ITD was normal for neurons tuned to 6 kHz
in device-reared owls, we assessed the representation of ITD in other
frequency laminae with respect to the 6 kHz representation. Thus, the
best ITD in the 6 kHz lamina was the referent for predicting the normal
best ITD for all sites in a given penetration. Table 5 summarizes best ITD relative to
predicted normal values measured at sites in the ICCls of both normal
and device-reared owls, grouped by best frequency. For sites with best
frequencies near 4 kHz, device rearing shifted best ITDs in the
adaptive direction, but the magnitude of the shift could account for
only a small portion of the shifts measured in the ICX and optic
tectum. For sites with best frequencies near 6 and 8 kHz, device
rearing did not affect best ITDs. These data implicate the ICX as a
primary site of plasticity.
Frequency responses
Device rearing did not affect frequency responses in the ICCls. In
both normal and device-reared owls, ICCls neurons responded robustly to
an optimal frequency of between 1 and 9 kHz (examples of responses to
best frequencies at different sites in individual electrode
penetrations in a normal and a device-reared owl are shown in Fig.
16A,D).
These neurons were sharply tuned for frequency, with frequency tuning
curves that had similar shapes (Fig.
16B,E) and tuning widths of ~1.5
kHz (Table 1) in both normal and device-reared owls. Moreover, device
rearing did not affect the amount of tissue representing individual
frequencies along dorsoventral electrode penetrations (Fig.
16C,F). There was no significant
difference in the widths of frequency laminae between normal and
device-reared owls (unpaired t tests on data from 2 kHz-wide
bins of best frequency between 3 and 9 kHz, p > 0.05).
Noticeably absent was any device-induced change in the responses of
ICCls units tuned to frequencies near 6 kHz, as was found in the optic
tectum (Fig. 4) and the ICX (Figs. 8, 9).

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Figure 16.
Frequency responses in the ICCls of normal
(A-C) and device-reared
(D-F) owls. A, Raster display
representing trial-by-trial responses to a tonal stimulus of the
frequency indicated during the 100 msec after stimulus onset. Responses
were measured at three different sites along a single electrode
penetration; the stimulus frequency was chosen to match the best
frequency of the given site. Five repetitions per stimulus are shown.
B, Composite frequency-response functions, depicting
the means and SDs of normalized frequency-response functions from
various sites in the ICCls of four normal owls. The three
curves are composites of frequency-response functions with
best values between 3.8 and 4.2 kHz (squares: data from
6 sites, width = 0.8 kHz), between 5.8 and 6.2 kHz
(triangles: n = 4, width = 1.4 kHz), and between 7.6 and 8.0 kHz (circles:
n = 6, width = 1.7 kHz). C,
Lamina width in the ICCls of normal owls. For all adjacent pairs of
recording sites in a given dorsoventral electrode penetration through
the ICCls, the amount of tissue per kilohertz change in best frequency
between the two sites (computed as the change in depth, moving
ventrally, divided by the change in best frequency) is plotted as a
function of the average of the best frequencies measured at the two
sites. Positive ordinate values indicate a change toward higher best
frequencies ventrally. Larger absolute ordinate values indicate wider
frequency laminae. D-F, Data from device-reared owls
plotted in the same format as in A-F,
respectively. E, Squares:
n = 17, width = 1.4 kHz;
triangles: n = 39, width = 1.4 kHz; circles: n = 8, width = 1.6 kHz.
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Near the ICC-ICX border
When recording near the boundary between the ICCls and the ICX in
normal and device-reared owls, we found combinations of electrode
position, frequency tuning properties, progression of best ILDs, and
latencies that were partially consistent with properties of neurons
from each nucleus. For example, 25 dorsoventral penetrations through
the IC of device-reared owls contained sites with broad frequency
tuning (median tuning width >3 kHz), followed by a series of sites
that had narrow frequency tuning curves with best values that increased
systematically. Reconstructions of lesions from four of these
penetrations revealed that they were located 400-600 µm from the
lateral border of the ICCcore, which placed them near the ICCls-ICX
border (Wagner et al., 1987 ; Takahashi and Konishi, 1988 ; Takahashi et
al., 1989 ; Brainard and Knudsen, 1993 ).
We found that in this ICC-ICX border region, device rearing caused
frequency-dependent shifts in ITD tuning that were intermediate between
those measured in the ICCls and those measured in the ICX (Fig.
17). For sites that had narrow
frequency tuning curves with best values that progressed systematically
toward higher values within a single penetration, we compared
narrowband best ITDs across best frequencies (Fig. 17A), as
was done in the ICCls. For these penetrations, best ITDs had a 1-26
µsec range, with a median range of 13 µsec (n = 19)
(Fig. 17C, open symbols). Alternatively, for
sites with broad frequency tuning, we measured narrowband best ITDs
using several different narrowband stimuli centered on a 2-4 kHz range
of frequencies (Fig. 17B), as was done in the ICX. For these
sites, best ITDs had a 2-48 µsec range, with a median range of 26 µsec (n = 22) (Fig. 17C, closed
symbols). The difference between best ITDs at 4 and 8 kHz,
determined either at single sites with narrowband stimuli or at
different sites within a single penetration, had a median value of 17 µsec (IQR = 15 µsec, n = 21).
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