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The Journal of Neuroscience, August 15, 2002, 22(16):7254-7263
Physiology of the Auditory Afferents in an Acoustic Parasitoid
Fly
Michael L.
Oshinsky1 and
Ronald R.
Hoy2
1 Department of Neurology, Thomas Jefferson University,
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19107, and 2 Department of
Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York 14953
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ABSTRACT |
The fly, Ormia ochracea, possess a novel auditory
organ, which allows it to detect airborne sounds. The mechanical
coupling of its pair of tympanal membranes provides the basis for a
unique means of sensing the direction of a sound source. In this study, we characterized the neuroanatomy, frequency tuning, and
neurophysiological response properties of the acoustic afferents. Our
experiments demonstrate that the fly's nervous system is able to
encode and localize the direction of a sound source, although the
binaural auditory cues available in the acoustic sound field are
miniscule. Almost all of the acoustic afferents recorded in this study
responded to short and long sound pulses with a phasic burst of one to
four action potentials. A few afferents responded tonically for the duration of the sound stimulus. A prominent class of afferents responds
to suprathreshold stimuli with only a single spike discharge, independent of stimulus level, frequency, or duration. We also tested
the response of the afferents to speakers separated by 180° along the
azimuth of the fly. We found that the afferent responses have a shorter
latency because of ipsilateral stimulation. This could be a temporal
code of the direction of a sound source. The threshold frequency tuning
for the afferents revealed a range of sensitivities to the frequency of
the cricket host's calling song frequency. The difference in the
number of afferents above threshold on either side of the animal is a
population code, which can also be used for sound localization.
Key words:
directional hearing; time coding; population coding; parasitoid; mechanical coupling; arthropod
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INTRODUCTION |
Sound localization is a fundamental
task of the auditory system. The ears of most animals are separated as
far apart on their head or body as possible. This anatomical fact
permits them to detect differences in a directional sound wave as it
sweeps past the near ear and then the far ear. There are two kinds of
interaural difference cues. First, the sound level at the near ear may
be greater than at the far ear; this is the interaural level difference (ILD), and it is frequency-dependent. If the distance separating the
two ears is greater than one-tenth of wavelength of an incident sound,
sound is diffracted by the intervening tissues of the head (vertebrates) or body (insects) that casts the far ear in the sound
shadow of the animal's body (Michelsen, 1994 ). Second, the sound wave will arrive at the near ear before the far ear; this is the
interaural time difference, or delay, (ITD) depending only on the speed
of sound, and so it is frequency-independent. The magnitude of the ITD
and ILD will both decrease as an animal's head or body size decreases.
However, many small animals, including insects, can hear the same sound
frequencies that are heard by much larger animals. They possess
auditory adaptations to cope with the mismatch between wavelength and
body size to generate interaural cues for sound localization
(Michelsen, 1992 ).
The acoustic parasitoid fly Ormia ochracea finds its host,
the field cricket Gryllus rubens, by homing in on the
cricket's mating call (Cade, 1976 ; Walker, 1993 ). This is remarkable
because the interaural distance separating the fly's hearing organs
(500 µm) is nearly 15 times shorter than the 7.35 cm wavelength of the host's calling song (4.5 kHz) (Robert et al., 1992 ).
Ormia's small size means it generates an immeasurably small
(0 dB) ILD and a miniscule interaural time cue, at most 1.5 µsec, at
90° azimuth. Yet Ormia possesses a hearing organ that is
highly sensitive to the direction of G. rubens calling song
(Robert and Hoy, 1998 ; Mason et al., 2001 ; Muller and Robert, 2001 ).
The key to Ormia's directional sensitivity is the novel
mechanical coupling of its tympanal membranes, in the auditory
periphery (Miles et al., 1995 ). In brief, this acoustic coupling
mechanism generates significantly greater interaural intensity (5-10
dB) and time differences (>50 µsec) than are available from the
impinging sound field, alone. We now turn to the question of how the
fly's auditory system processes these small interaural cues. The
response properties of single afferents in the fly's auditory
afferents indicate that they are acute in the temporal domain. These
are the cues that are "handed off" to the second order auditory
interneurons. The fly appears to overcome the acoustic disadvantage of
its small size relative to the behaviorally salient wavelengths of the
signal it must localize by possessing biomechanical innovations in its
auditory periphery and by time and intensity coding features in its
auditory afferents.
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MATERIALS AND METHODS |
Animals. The animals used in this study are gravid
(larvae-bearing) female flies of the species Ormia ochracea
(Diptera: Tachinidae, Ormiini). They were reared from a lab colony
descended from field-caught females attracted to sound traps in
Gainesville, Florida and at the Gulf Coast Research and Education
Center (Bradenton, FL), according to the procedures of Walker (1986)
and Walker and Wineriter (1990) .
Physiological recordings and staining of single auditory
afferents. To prepare the flies for physiological recording, they were immobilized by chilling on ice for 5 min. They were waxed, dorsal
side up, to a small round magnet (diameter 1 cm) using a wax mixture
(4:1) consisting of Sticky wax (Kerr Manufacturing Company) and
beeswax. The fly's dorsum was dissected, and the flight muscles and
the gut were removed to reveal the nervous system, the fused thoracic
ganglion. The dorsal approach for dissection was preferred because it
spares damage to the hearing organs, which are situated ventral and
frontal on the fly. For intracellular recording, we used
high-resistance, glass pipette microelectrodes, with 70-140 M
impedance. The tip of the electrode was filled with 1% Lucifer yellow
(catalog #LY-L20964; Sigma, St. Louis, MO) and backfilled with 100 mM LiCl2. Sometimes, we
filled the micropipette with other dye-marking solutions such as 100 mM CoCl2 or 4% Neurobiotin (Vector Laboratories,
Burlingame, CA), in which case the shanks contained the same solutions.
The signals were led to either an A & M Systems Model 1600 or a Dagan
(Minneapolis, MN) voltage-clamp amplifier. Whenever we were able
to record the physiological response of an acoustically responsive
cell, we attempted to inject dye into it. In 8 of 41 single-unit
recordings, dye staining confirmed that the identity of the unit as an
auditory afferent; the others were incompletely stained or not stained at all. When physiological responses were recorded from a unit but were
not stained, the consistency of response among stained and unstained
afferents was marked by a very short latency of response (<4 msec)
that we took to be a reliable and characteristic identifier. We know
that the response latencies of second order interneurons are at least
twice as long (Oshinsky, 1998 ). Our confidence that even unstained
auditory units were likely to be afferent cells was based on our
knowledge of the anatomy of the auditory system. We confined our
recordings to a localized region of the fused thoracic ganglion where
the frontal nerve (containing the auditory nerve) enters the thoracic
ganglion; this region is distant from the auditory neuropil
areas (Stumpner and Lakes-Harlan, 1996 ; Oshinsky, 1998 ). This strategy
minimizes the possibility that the recordings were made from auditory
interneurons, which have most of their projections near the middle each
thoracic neuromere (Stumpner and Lakes-Harlan, 1996 ; Oshinsky, 1998 ).
Our anatomical data show that all afferent fibers are <2 µm in
diameter, and many are <0.5 µm. This made long-term intracellular
recordings difficult and staining problematic. The identity of stained
single afferents was matched against the terminal projections of
multiple afferents that were stained, en masse, by backfilling the from the afferent nerve (see below). Confirmation of afferent identity was
easy because of the stereotyped course and anatomy of the auditory
afferent system.
Auditory stimulus. We calibrated the stimulus field emitted
from speakers (high-performance tweeter; ESS Systems AM1) by making measurements in the free field with a Bruel & Kjaer (Norcross, GA) type 4138 condenser microphone connected to a Bruel & Kjaer model 2608 or model 2209 sound level meter. Acoustic stimuli were programmed through a TDT, Inc. (Gainesville, FL) System 2 and fed into
a Harmon-Kardon model HK6100 amplifier, and in turn connected to a TDT
programmable attenuator. The Bruel & Kjaer microphone was placed at the
position of the fly, and the intensity of sound pulses at frequencies
between 1 and 25 kHz were calibrated to within 0.5-95 dB sound
pressure level (SPL) with reference to a continuous tone. The speakers
were placed in the horizontal plane at ±90° azimuth with respect to
the anteroposterior axis of the animal. The arrival time of the sound
from each speaker to the fly was calibrated to match within 1 µsec
using a Gould Instruments (Valley View, OH) model 1604 digital
oscilloscope, Bruel & Kjaer 4138 microphone, and a Bruel & Kjaer model
5935 power supply and amplifier.
Neuroanatomy from backfills. The anatomy of the chordotonal
auditory sensory organ was obtained by the backfill technique, using
fluorescent dextrans (Texas Red D-3328 or FITC D-3306; Molecular Probes, Eugene, OR), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), or cobalt chloride. A small crystal of the stain reagent was applied directly onto the
sensory organ exposed by dissection. A small drop of saline (O'Shea
and Williams, 1974 ) was also applied, and the animal or preparation was
incubated at 4°C for 24 hr. The thoracic ganglion was removed by
dissection and fixed in 4% paraformaldehyde, pH 7.4, prepared from
16% stock solutions (catalog #15710; Electron Microscopy Sciences,
Fort Washington, PA). The ganglion was then dehydrated in ethanol,
cleared in methyl salicylate, and viewed with a Bio-Rad (Hercules, CA)
MRC 600 confocal microscope. The 1 µm optical sections were then
digitally projected in the z plane to produce one image
(Confocal Assistant, 1994-1996; Todd Clark Brelje). Projections
stained by HRP or the cobalt sulfide procedure were viewed and
photographed via conventional photomicroscopy procedures. Where cobalt
chloride was used as a stain, the cobalt was precipitated by reaction
with hydrogen sulfide, and then fixed with Carnoy's solution. The
preparation was cleared with methyl salicylate and viewed using
conventional light microscopy.
Data acquisition and analysis. Threshold-tuning curves were
obtained using custom-designed software (Vreislander et al.,
1991 ) for a Macintosh and a Mac AdiosII analog-to-digital (A/D) board (GW Instruments, Somerville, MA) with an algorithm described in Taylor
and Creelman (1967) . Briefly, the magnitude and the direction of the
intensity steps during the tests for threshold are based on the results
for previous trials. This method permitted obtaining threshold-tuning
curves in <2 min. This was essential because the small size of the
afferent axons made long-term recordings very difficult. The threshold
frequency response of the afferent axons was tested using a 10 msec
sound pulse with a 1 msec rise-fall ramp. The repetition rate for
sound tones used for the tuning curves was 10 Hz. The trapezoidal shape
of a stimulus tone closely resembles a cricket's natural sound pulse.
Auditory threshold was defined as a response of one or more spikes, at
least three times to a set of five stimulus tones. Spikes were detected
using a modified World Precision Instruments (Sarasota, FL) window
discriminator and a custom spike buffer on the GW board.
Physiological and acoustic data were recorded for off-line analysis on
an AR Vetter (Rebersburg, PA) model 420 F tape recorder. Custom
software, written on a personal computer, was used for sound
presentation using an array processor and A/D equipment from TDT, Inc.
All digital signals were filtered to remove aliasing. A sampling rate
of 100 kHz allowed for 10 µsec resolution of the spike times. Data
analysis was done using IgorPro (WaveMetrics, Lake Oswego, OR) and
Mathematica (Wolfram Research). The logistic regression equation in
Figure 5 was computed using SAS analysis software.
Refractory period measurements. The objective was to
quantify the ability of an afferent unit to follow a periodic
characteristic of the acoustic stimulus such as the tone pulse envelope
itself. The pulse repetition rate was an experimental variable. The
stimulus procedure consisted of a series of four different trains of
tone pulses. Each train consisted of 20 pulses with either 1, 3, 5, or
10 msec interpulse intervals. Each pulse train was presented at least
three times. The proportion of sound pulses that the unit responded to
was measured. For example, if the afferent unit responds to 16 of the
20 pulses in a stimulus train, the proportion of afferent responses was
0.80.
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RESULTS |
Anatomy
The hearing organs (bulba acusticae) of O. ochracea are a pair of white, egg-shaped structures that are
suspended within the thoracic cavity and behind the tympanal membranes,
to which they are attached. Each sensory organ contains ~90-100
afferent cells each associated with support cells and scolopales
(Robert et al., 1994a ; Edgecomb et al., 1995 ; Robert and Willi,
2000 ). Each bulba acustica is directly attached to
its tympanum by means of a stiff rod-like cuticular apodeme (Robert et
al., 1994b ). This means that any sound induced vibration of the
tympanum would be directly transferred to the sensory organ, with the
apodeme acting like a piston. It was possible to make small lesions in
the bulba and apply small amounts of marker reagents (such as cobalt
chloride, HRP, fluorescent dextran, or neurobiotin), which were taken
up by from a few to many afferent cells and transported to their terminals in the central ganglia, thus revealing the branching structure of the afferent projection within the CNS. Cobalt chloride was especially useful because it often resulted in staining scores of
afferents and this en masse staining of terminals helped to define the length and breadth of terminal projections, and hence reveal
the morphology of the auditory neuropils.
When HRP, neurobiotin, or fluorescent dextrans were applied to the
bulba, the stains remained solely within the afferents, and such
preparations allowed us to visualize the terminal projections of
variable numbers of afferent fibers from many to a few afferents, which
permitted us to confirm the identity of single fibers stained from
intracellular injections of Lucifer yellow (above). Figure 1A is an image of a
population of afferent terminals stained en masse using
Texas Red dextran and photographed by digital confocal microscopy; the
image consists of the summed projection of twenty-three optical
sections, each 1-µm-thick. It is consistent with the result of
examining >200 stained afferent preparations using various marker
dyes. The afferent projections and neurons are shown in Figure 1 and
are drawn in the context of a labeled "standard" ganglionic
outline, with the aid of camera lucida drawing, as well as from
photographs made from confocal microscopy. The thoracic neuromeres and
the extent of the auditory neuropils are drawn in dotted lines, but
reflect the reliable anatomical compartments seen in our histological
preparations. The auditory nerve (frontal nerve-FN) enters the fused
thoracic-abdominal ganglion, anteriorly, and forms a compact, well
defined nerve tract (Fig. 1A). The auditory tract
then turns toward the midline and runs posteriorly through all three
thoracic neuromeres, branching within each one and contributing a spray
of terminals, thereby defining acoustic neuropils in the prothoracic
(T1), mesothoracic (T2), and metathoracic (T3) neuromeres. Taken
together, the two bilateral projections of the auditory tract define a
ventral ellipse (VE). The auditory tract and its neuropils lie entirely
in the ventral region of the fused ganglion and only within the
thoracic neuromeres. No afferent projections into the posterior
abdominal neuromeres posterior to T3 were ever seen in our
preparations.

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Figure 1.
Anatomy of the acoustic afferents of the right
bulba acustica in Ormia ochracea.
A, This is a dorsal view of a
z-projection of 28, 1-µm-thick confocal optical
sections. Texas Red dextran dye was applied to the bulba acustica, and
>50 afferents were stained. Stained afferents project to three
acoustic neuropil regions in the ventral region of the three neuromeres
in the fused thoracic ganglion of the fly. B, A single
auditory afferent stained with fluorescent dextrans. There is a dense
projection into the T2 auditory neuropil area from this afferent. The
T1 and T3 neuropil regions receive minimal projections from this
afferent. C, A single auditory afferent stained with
fluorescent Texas Red dextrans. There are dense projections into the T1
and T2 auditory neuropil area from this afferent. The T3 neuropil
region does not receive any projections from this afferent.
D, A single auditory afferent stained by Lucifer yellow
injection. A single branch projects into the T1 auditory area from the
primary neurite. This branch then continues projecting to the T2
auditory neuromere. There is a separate projection from the primary
neurite into the T2 auditory area and a minimal projection to the T3
auditory area. AMN, Accessory mesothoracic neuromere;
CN, cervical connective; FN, frontal
nerve; HN, haltere nerve; T1, prothoracic
neuromere; T2, mesothoracic neuromere;
T3, metathoracic neuromere; VE, ventral
ellipse; WN, wing nerve.
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Figure 1B-D is an anatomical depiction of
individually stained afferent fibers. Figure 1, B and
C, resulted from retrograde staining made by applying dye to
the bulba, but Figure 1D is a Lucifer
yellow preparation from an apparent intracellular penetration. Although
most of the single fiber stains seen in our preparations contributed
projections to all three neuromeres, a few stained only two: T1 and T2
(Fig. 1C). The extent of efflorescence for any given
terminal fiber within a particular thoracic neuromere appears to be
variable, as also seen from Figure 1C. Such differences may
have functional significance, but we realize that incomplete staining
could also produce the appearance of differential efflorescence. However, examination of many afferent fiber terminals gives the impression that such differences are real.
Frequency tuning of the auditory afferents
Despite their small diameters, we were able to record from the
axons of single auditory afferent fibers in the auditory tract with
glass micropipette electrodes. Their small axons (maximum diameters of
2 µm) made it difficult to maintain the penetration for long enough
periods to get complete tuning information for every unit. We present
tuning curves from a sample of 28 afferents from 26 flies where
reasonable amounts of data were obtained. In the two flies where we
obtained two tuning curves, there was no significant difference in best
frequency or threshold. A population tuning curve from the entire
sample of 28 fibers was plotted in Figure
2A. The collective best
frequencies (BFs) fall within a range from 4 to 9 kHz. In this sample,
the BFs were also displayed categorically as a frequency histogram in
Figure 2B, and it reinforces the impression gained
from the population tuning curve. In Figure 2C, we compared
the physiological tuning of our afferent sample with the mechanical
tuning of the tympanal membrane, as measured by laser vibrometry (Miles
et al., 1995 ; Robert et al., 1996 ). It should not be surprising that
the neural tuning curve closely follows the mechanical tuning curve in
frequency and dynamic range. The tympanal movements are directly
reflected in the movements of the auditory organ; they are, after all,
mechanically coupled (Miles et al., 1995 ).

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Figure 2.
Summary of the frequency threshold response in the
auditory afferents of Ormia ochracea. A,
Average ± SDs for 28 afferents (type 1, type 2, and type 3)
obtained with 10 msec pulses repeated at 1 Hz. B,
Histogram of the number of afferents with best frequencies at a
particular frequency. These data were compiled from the same tuning
curves that are averaged in A. C,
Comparison of the average tuning of the afferents in this study
(solid line, left ordinate) with the
membrane displacement measured with laser vibrometry measured in
relative decibels (dotted line, right ordinate). The
membrane response amplitude was measured with laser vibrometry, using a
broad band white noise stimulus between 1 and 25 kHz (Robert et al.,
1996 ).
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The tuning curves of individual afferent fibers are often sharper than
the average curve of Figure 1A. The average Q3dB, the ratio of the BF over the bandwidth at 3 dB above the BF threshold, of
the combined grand average tuning curve is 2.6. This is sharper than
the predicted Q3dB from the mechanical response of the tympana of 1.9 (Fig. 2C). Figure
3A shows three examples, each
from different animals, of threshold tuning curves for afferents with
BFs <10 kHz. Although none of these afferents have a BF of 4.5 kHz,
which is the frequency with the most power in the host's calling song, the tuning at BF is sufficiently broad to be relatively sensitive to
4.5 kHz. Figure 3B demonstrates the tuning curves for three single afferent fibers with BFs >10 kHz. In general, the tuning curves
for afferents tuned to high frequencies (BFs >10 kHz; mean Q3dB, 6.4)
are sharper than for those tuned to low frequencies (BFs <10 kHz; mean
Q3dB, 2.1).

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Figure 3.
A, Examples of three tuning curves
for afferents with best frequencies <10 kHz. B,
Examples of three tuning curves for afferents with best frequencies
>10 kHz.
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Physiological response properties of single afferent fibers
We made our recordings from single axons in the auditory tract
near its origin, where the frontal nerve joins the central ganglion.
This location made it much more likely that the electrodes would
encounter afferent fibers than auditory interneurons (Fig. 1A) (Oshinsky, 1998 ). The search tone used to elicit
auditory responses was a 10-msec-long pulse (rise-fall ramp time of 1 msec) at one of two frequencies, either 5 or 7 kHz. Also, we could
choose to increase the pulse duration up to 100 msec to characterize the tonic response of a unit. The 41 afferents in our data set fell
into one of three physiological response categories, type 1 (predominantly), type 2, and type 3.
Type 1 afferents
Type 1 afferents, which comprised 23 of the 41 afferents sampled,
were the most common kind. Their response to auditory tone stimuli was
distinctive and unusual in that one and only one action potential was
elicited by any given suprathreshold tone pulse. Regardless of the
stimulus intensity or duration, and whether in response to a single
tone or to tones in trains, type 1 afferents discharged only one spike
per tone (Fig. 4A,B).
Spontaneous activity in type 1 afferents was very rarely observed (Fig.
4C); in particular, no bursts of spikes, such as occur in
injury discharges, were recorded.

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Figure 4.
Physiological recordings of a type 1 phasic
acoustic afferent. A, Response of a type 1 afferent to
synthetic cricket song (50 pps, 5 kHz, 50% duty cycle, 85 dB SPL).
Calibration: 2 mV, 10 msec. B, Phasic response of a type
1 afferent to a 100 msec sound pulse at its BF, 7 kHz at 80 dB SPL.
Calibration: same as in A. C, Raster and
PST histogram of a type 1 afferent in response to the repetition of the
100 msec stimulus at 1 Hz. Very little variation can be seen in the
latency of the spike at this resolution (bin width, 20 µsec).
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A second notable response characteristic of type 1 cells is their
strict time-locking to the stimulus onset. At any given suprathreshold intensity level, type 1 response latencies were reproducible within a very narrow time window (Fig. 4C). For
example, in Figure 4C, the occurrence of the spike was
time-locked to the onset of the stimulus so precisely that its SD, or
jitter, was 0.080 msec. The latencies of the spike responses of seven
different type 1 afferents, each to a set of 30 successive tones
revealed an average latency of 2.84 msec, but an average jitter of just 76 µsec (0.076 msec) (Table 1). It
appears that the parasitoid fly's auditory afferents are very
sensitive to the pulse repetition rate of the host's calling song, as
evidenced from the tight time-locking (low jitter) to the onset of each
pulse.
Type 1 afferents appear to be good candidates for the function of time
coding. We measured the refractory period for type 1 afferents because
the precision of the discharge of a neuron is sensitive to its
refractory period (Berry and Meister, 1998 ). For example, longer
refractory periods allow sensory neurons to respond to trains of
repetitive stimuli with a consistent latency. To determine the
refractory period or time constant of type 1 afferents, we measured the
minimum interval of time between two stimulus pulses that allowed the
afferent neuron to respond to both pulses. We defined the refractory
period as the length of the interpulse interval required to elicit an
afferent discharge in at least 63% of the stimulus presentations,
which conforms to conventional definitions of refractory period (Rieke
et al., 1997 ). The stimulus pulse was defined as a 5 kHz
stimulus tone, 10 msec in duration, and presented at a level of 85 dB
SPL; the interpulse interval was varied at 1, 3, 5, and 10 msec. Trains of 20 pulses were presented at 1 Hz. Data were collected from 10 presentations of such pulse trains and so data from a total of 200 stimulus presentations for each interpulse interval were collected from
three different animals. Figure 5
displays the data and a logistical equation describing the best fit for
the data. The graph shows that the proportion of afferent responses (single spikes) to the train of tone pulses is highly sensitive to the
interpulse interval. The best fit follows equation:
f(x) = (e 1.36x 5.26)/(1 + e 1.36x 5.26)
(p << 0.01). The value of the time constant, 4.26 msec, was extrapolated from the sigmoidal curve in Figure 5. We
interpret these data to mean that the phasic afferents require a
"quiet" period (no acoustic stimulation) of >4 msec between sound
pulses to respond to >63% of a train of pulses. Thus, although a type
1 afferent discharges only a single action potential during the first 4 msec of the 10 msec sound pulse and is inactive for the remaining 6 msec while the sound stimulus is still present, it still requires an
additional 4.26 msec of silence during the interpulse interval before
it can be predicted with confidence to discharge again if stimulated by a following sound pulse. These temporal characteristics "fit" nicely the task of detecting the mate calling song of its cricket host, Gryllus rubens (in Florida, Walker, 2000 ) or
Teleogryllus oceanicus (in Hawaii, Zuk et al., 1993 )
which have a ~10 or ~41 msec interpulse interval in their calling
songs, respectively.

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Figure 5.
The proportion of phasic afferent spikes to sound
pulses (10 msec, 5 kHz, 85 dB SPL) presented with varying interpulse
intervals. Because the interpulse interval increases the phasic
afferent is able to reset before the next sound pulse, so there is a
higher proportion of responses. The time constant ( ) for the
refractory period of this phasic afferent is defined as the interpulse
interval that will allow the afferent to respond to 63% of the sound
pulses.
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Type 1 afferents exhibit an intensity-level dependent latency shift,
commonly observed in other sensory systems, in which latency of
response and stimulus intensity level are inversely related. In
Ormia, however, this common sensory property has potential implications for processing sound direction, as will be discussed below.
Type 2 afferents
In our recording sample, type 2 afferents were encountered less
frequently than type 1. Sixteen of the 41 cells examined in detail were
of this type. Their response properties are depicted in Figure
6. Like type 1 afferents, they are also
phasic in their response but differ by generating from two to four
action potentials per stimulus tone, at a discharge rate on the order
of 300 Hz, depending on stimulus level, as opposed to the single spikes
from type 1 afferents. Figure 6A shows the response
of a type 2 afferent to a stimulus consisting of five repetitions of a
tone pulse: 4 kHz carrier frequency, 10 msec pulse duration, delivered
at a 50% duty cycle and at a level of 85 dB SPL. Figure
6B shows the response to a 5 kHz, 100 msec duration
tone pulse delivered at 85 dB SPL. Clearly, increasing the stimulus
duration does not necessarily elicit more spikes. Figure 6C
is a raster display (above) and its peristimulus time (PST)
histogram (below) showing 35 repetitions of a 100 msec, 5 kHz duration
tone stimulus. It shows that the response intervals and their jitter in
type 2 afferents, as in type 1, are time-coded with precision. For the
first responding spike, the average latency and jitter for this
afferent is 2.90 ± 0.17 msec. The first four spikes show time
locking, and the precision of the latency lock is greater for the first
two spikes than for the third or fourth. A few spikes occur
sporadically after the initial burst of four spikes; this may reflect a
low level of spontaneous activity. Type 2 afferents also exhibit an inverse relationship between response latency and stimulus intensity level.

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Figure 6.
Physiological recordings of a type 2 phasic
acoustic afferent. A, Response to synthetic cricket song
(50 pps, 4 kHz, 50% duty cycle, 95 dB SPL). Calibration: 2 mV, 10 msec. B, Phasic response to a 100 msec sound pulse at
the BF of the cell, 5 kHz at 85 dB SPL. C, Raster and
PST histogram of a type 2 afferent in response to the repetition of the
100 msec stimulus at 1 Hz. Four distinct clusters of spikes are seen in
the response to this 100 msec sound pulse (bin width, 20 µsec).
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Type 3 afferents
Type 3 afferents were rarely encountered in this study, accounting
for only 2 of the 41 cells sampled. These cells discharge spikes
throughout the duration of the stimulus tone, hence the term for this
kind of cell, "tonic". Figure
7A shows a typical type 3 response to a brief tone (5 kHz carrier, 10 msec duration, at 75 dB
SPL); the four spikes elicited would not distinguish this cell from a
type 2 cell. However, when the same stimulus was increased in duration
to 100 msec, the afferent discharged a train of spikes that persisted
for the full length of the tone (Fig. 7B). Type 3 cells have
a low level of spontaneous activity, similar to the other two afferent
types. The spontaneous rate of this cell in the absence of acoustic
stimulation was less than one spike per second. Figure 7C is
another raster plot and PST histogram of a type 3 cell. Type 3 cells
show time locking to the stimulus onset only for the first two action
potentials, after which the latency lock is no longer apparent. The
latency and jitter for the first spike is 3.79 ± 0.082 msec.

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Figure 7.
Physiological recordings of a type 3 tonic
acoustic afferent. A, Response to a single 10 msec
cricket-like sound pulse (1 msec rise-fall, 5 kHz, 85 dB SPL).
Calibration: 2 mV, 10 msec. B, Tonic response for the
duration of the 100 msec at its BF, 7 kHz at 85 dB SPL. Calibration: 2 mV, 10 msec. C, Raster and PST histogram of a type 3 afferent in response to the repetition of the 100 msec stimulus at 1 Hz. The latency for the first two spikes is relatively invariant
compared with the timing of the subsequent spikes during the rest of
the stimulus (bin width, 20 µsec).
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Directional sensitivity
Latency coding
In all three classes of auditory afferents, the response latency
is dependent on the stimulus intensity level. As the stimulus level is
systematically increased, the latency of the first spike (and only
spike in type 1 afferents) decreases monotonically to some demonstrable
minimum value. Figure
8A illustrates the
response of a typical type 1 afferent cell to a series of five 5 kHz
tone pulses, each of which is increased stepwise in intensity level, in
5 dB steps. Reading left to right, the first spike is elicited to the
most intense stimulus (95 dB) i.e., it occurs with the shortest delay.
The succeeding spikes appear in order of stimulus intensity. The least
intense stimulus, 75 dB, elicited the right-most spike with the longest
delay. This elementary intensity/latency relationship was observed for
all three types of afferent cells.

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Figure 8.
Direction-dependent physiology of the type 1 phasic afferents. A, There is a latency shift of the
spikes elicited by stimuli of different intensities. In this
experiment, sound was presented from 95-75 dB SPL in 5 dB steps.
Calibration: 1 mV, 1 msec. B, There is a latency
difference in the spikes elicited by sound on either side of the
animal. This is caused by a decrease in the amplitude of the movement
of the tympanal membrane contralateral to a sound stimulus. The
dashed reference line shows that a 10 dB difference in
intensity would produce a latency shift consistent with the difference
in the latency caused by ipsilateral versus contralateral
stimulation.
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The relationship between latency coding and directional sensitivity
emerges only when we compare the response latencies between sensory
organs (either at the level of spikes from single units or compound
action potential spikes from the whole auditory nerve) to a directional
sound source (Fig. 8B). Let us say we record from an
afferent cell from the auditory organ on the animal's right side in
response to cricket-like sounds played back from a loudspeaker on the
animal's left side, meaning that the sound source is coming from the
"far" (or contralateral) speaker relative to the ear that provides
the input to the afferent. In this configuration, we would generate the
upper latency-intensity curve in Figure 8B. Then,
change the experimental configuration simply by playing back the same
set of stimuli from a loudspeaker placed on the animal's right side,
such that the sound source comes from the "near" (or ipsilateral)
speaker relative to the ear (both speakers placed symmetrically with
respect to 0° azimuth). This change would generate the lower
latency-intensity curve in Fig. 8B. For either
ipsilateral or contralateral stimulation, the data points represent the
mean spike latencies for five repetitions of the stimulus at each
intensity level. The variation in the response latency, or spike
jitter, is plotted as SD of the mean latency. Although the two
latency-intensity curves parallel each other, they are also well
separated from each other (p << 0.01, two-way ANOVA). This is a graphical depiction of the directionally dependent difference in the two latency-intensity curves in each independent auditory channel. The lack of any overlap between the mean spike latencies at any intensity means the source direction could be coded by
response latency between left and right channels and could serve as a
significant cue for interneurons, on which the afferent channels
converge. Furthermore, the jitter is negligible compared with the value
of the spike latencies themselves. Thus, when the sound source is
shifted from the ipsilateral to the contralateral side (from 90°
right to 90° left, for example), the response latencies of the
afferents are increased from 0.5 to 1 msec, depending on intensity
(Fig. 8B).
The two curves can be used to determine "trading relations" between
latency and intensity levels in the two auditory organs. Thus, for
example, the response delay of a given afferent neuron to an
ipsilateral sound source with a sound level of 75 dB is approximately
equivalent to the response delay to a contralateral sound source with a
sound level of 85 dB (Fig. 8B). Conversely, a 10 dB
decrease in stimulus intensity level resulting from shifting the sound
source from one side to the other produces nearly equivalent time
delays. The curves generated from our neural response data again find
close parallels with earlier findings from investigations of the
mechanical properties of the tympanal membranes. Robert et al. (1996)
reported that when the sound source is switched from one side to the
other the amplitude of vibrations in the contralateral tympanal
membrane is decreased by 10-12 dB relative to those of the ipsilateral
tympanum, to a 5 kHz tone. It seems likely, therefore, that the
directionally sensitive response latencies recorded in the afferents
reported here have their basis in the mechanical resonance properties
of the peripheral auditory apparatus (Miles et al., 1995 ).
Population coding: range fractionation and the emergence
of directionality
We compiled the thresholds at the afferents' best frequencies of
all 28 of the 5 kHz-tuned afferents and found that they are distributed
over a wide range, from 50 to 93 dB SPL (Fig.
9). The 43 dB dynamic range provides a
physiological mechanism for sound intensity discrimination and
subsequent sound localization by the animal, as has been suggested
earlier by Römer et al. (1998) . In the Discussion, we will
propose a hypothesis of the population coding for sound localization
based on intensity differences.

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Figure 9.
Range fractionation of the all the afferent types.
The cumulative histogram of the proportion of afferents above threshold
in response to a 5 kHz stimulus at various intensities. The proportion
of afferents above threshold on the contralateral side of the animal
will be less because of the amplitude decrease in the movement of the
contralateral tympanal membrane caused by the mechanical coupling of
the tympana. The lines show the relative proportion of
the afferents that would be above threshold in response to an 85 dB SPL
ipsilateral stimulus. The contralateral side of the animal will be
subject to a 10 dB attenuation of the stimulus, therefore 55% fewer
afferents will be above threshold on that side.
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Figure 9 is a cumulative histogram of afferent thresholds. The
histogram depicts the proportion of afferents that would be above
threshold at any given intensity, for a 5 kHz tone pulse. The
horizontal lines provide a marker to compare the proportion of
afferents that would be above threshold to a 75 dB SPL
(n = 10 of 28) stimulus and the proportion that would
respond to stimulus at 85 dB stimulus (n = 25 of 28).
This example can be interpreted to mean that a directional sound source
that impinges on the nearest ear would elicit spikes from 89% of the
afferents in the ipsilateral auditory channel. However, in the
contralateral channel of the far ear, just 36% of the afferents are
above threshold. This marked difference in the interaural neural input
supports a plausible neural mechanism for directional sensitivity in
the auditory system. The 10 dB difference in stimulus intensity
highlighted in Figure 8B approximates the difference
in the vibration amplitudes of the ipsilateral and contralateral
tympanal membranes when the sound is on one side of the fly's body
(Robert et al., 1996 ). This again emphasizes the parallel in the
biomechanical response in the auditory periphery and the neural
response in the auditory system.
 |
DISCUSSION |
Temporal response characteristics of the auditory afferents
The prevalence of type 1 neurons is the most striking feature in
the physiological response properties of Ormia's auditory afferents. Afferents of this type discharged only a single spike when
stimulated by a threshold or suprathreshold 5 kHz tone pulse, no matter
how high the intensity level or how long its duration. Type 1 phasic
neurons also exhibited very precise latency locking with the stimulus
onset; i.e., the jitter in the time delay was exceedingly small, on the
order of 75-80 µsec. Neurons with similar properties have been
reported in vertebrate sensory systems that feature high acuity in the
temporal domain and appear to part of time-coding systems (Carr, 1993 ).
Even type 2 phasic cells showed precise time locking for the first one
or two spikes. Type 3 tonic cells also exhibited reliable time locking
for the first spike or two but variability increased greatly in
succeeding spikes. Thus, the response properties of nearly all of
Ormia's auditory afferents seem well suited to code the
temporal onset of pulsatile acoustic stimuli that occur in cricket songs.
Whereas we assert that type 1 afferents should be expected in a sensory
system such as Ormia's, in which temporal acuity is of the
essence, we are aware of the possibility that the type 1 hallmark, a
single-spike response, could be an injury artifact. Injury might arise
because the diameters of afferent axons are in the range of 1-2
µsec, and intracellular penetration might disrupt the membrane at the
point of penetration. However, we believe that the type 1 response is
real for the several reasons. First, locally rupturing the axonal
membrane would be expected to cause a sudden and massive inward sodium
current as well as an outward potassium current that would result in a
burst of spikes, well known to intracellular electrophysiologists as
the injury discharge. We rarely recorded such discharges during either
intracellular or extracellular recording. Second, the consistency of
the auditory response from unit to unit, among the 23 type 1 afferents
sampled implies a certain predictability that would be expected of a
stable (real) physiological characteristic. Third, not all of the 23 afferents recorded were from intracellular penetrations, as judged from
the failure to inject dyes into the cell; such recordings were likely
to have been extracellular. Yet the response characteristics of the
unstained preparations were the same as in stained ones. Fourth,
the low level of spontaneous activity is consistent with the high
"signal value" in occurrences of spikes. For these reasons we
believe that the type 1 auditory response is real and not artifactual.
In those cases where intracellular recordings were held for more than a
few minutes, the response to suprathreshold 5 kHz tones was very
stereotyped and predictable; the thresholds were stable throughout the
recordings, and the response latencies and jitter were stable. It is
worth comparing the response of type 1 with the more conventional type
2 phasic and type 3 tonic units. The same level of stability and
predictability of response was seen in type 1 and 2 afferents. The
level of spontaneous activity was low in type 1 and 2, as would be
expected for phasic afferents, and by comparison, somewhat higher, in
type 3, as would be expected for tonic afferents. The overwhelming
proportion of afferents from which stable recordings could be made were
of type 1 or 2, but type 3 were very rare. The argument that type 1 afferents are actually "injured" type 2 afferents is not
supported for reasons given above and by the fact that both 1 and 2 demonstrate the same level of stability in their response
characteristics from experiment to experiment, within type as well as
between types. As for the rarity of type 3, possibly there are simply
fewer of them but we can also speculate it reflects a "size
principle" at work. By this hypothesis, the largest diameter axons
(1-2 µm) are the most phasic, hence types 1 and 2 would be
relatively oversampled by intracellular recording, whereas the tonic
type 3 axons are the smallest in diameter (< 1 µm) and least likely
to be penetrated by microelectrodes.
Frequency tuning of auditory afferents
The power spectrum of the calling songs of the two host species of
field crickets have peaks, ~4.5 kHz (in Gryllus rubens) and ~5 kHz (in Teleogryllus oceanicus). The tuning
characteristic of Ormia's afferents range from 4 to 8 kHz;
the average best frequency of all afferents in our sample is ~7 kHz.
We know that the mechanical tuning of the auditory periphery dominates
the neural tuning caused by the nature of mechanical resonance of the
tympana, which is broadly tuned from 4 to 8 kHz (Miles et al., 1995 ;
Robert and Hoy, 1998 ). Thus, Ormia's mechanical and neural
tuning is broad enough to include the songs of its known cricket hosts.
Finally, we emphasize that our physiological data are based on
microelectrode recordings, which may bias our sampling toward cells
with larger axon diameters, i.e., in the range of 1-2 µm. It is
possible that the smallest diameter axons ( 1 µm) are tuned to ~5
kHz, but we were unable to verify this experimentally because the
recordings were near the limits of our recording techniques.
Coding schemes for directional sensitivity in the
auditory system
Interaural cues and directionality
From previous and present studies of Ormia's auditory
behavior, its auditory periphery, and sensory organs, the processing of
temporal cues is of the essence (Miles et al., 1995 ; Robert and Hoy,
1998 ; Müller and Robert, 2001 ; Mason et al., 2001 ). In the fly's
sound field, the arriving sound wave of the cricket's call does not
generate any interaural intensity cues. The large mismatch (>130:1)
between the 68 mm wavelength of the 5 kHz carrier frequency in the call
and the 0.5 mm interaural separation between the fly's tympanal
membranes makes diffraction extremely unlikely to occur, and indeed it
cannot be measured (Miles et al., 1995 ; Robert and Hoy, 1998 ). Hence,
no interaural intensity difference caused by a sound shadow, created by
the fly's body, can be generated. This leaves the fly with only one
measurable interaural cue in the sound field, the interaural time
difference. Even this cue is miniscule because the sound wave sweeps
past the 500 µm that separate right and left tympanal membranes
swiftly. The maximum value of the interaural time difference that
occurs when the sound source is at 90° azimuth is only 1.5 µsec.
Moreover, as the sound source approaches the main body axis, the
interaural time difference decreases (Miles et al., 1995 ;
Robert and Hoy, 1998 ), from a few hundred microseconds down
to tens of nanoseconds, and to zero when the sound source is head-on.
If the afferent response exhibited variability ("jitter") in
response latency on the order of hundreds of microseconds, sound
localization would be extremely difficult given the temporal
constraints in fly hearing. As described above, type 1 afferents seem
well suited for the task; they encode stimulus onset with a predictable
latency and very little jitter (75-80 µsec) (Thorpe, 1990 ).
Nonetheless, Ormia is faced with a notable lack of sizable
interaural sound cues.
Ormia's "solution" to its impoverishment of interaural
cues is novel. Miles et al. (1995) and Robert et al. (1998) found that the resonance properties of the fly's mechanically coupled tympanal membranes converts the interaural time difference into an amplified mechanical ITD (MITD). Thus, at 90° azimuth, the 1.5 µsec ITD in
the sound field is lengthened mechanically to 55 µsec MITD. In
addition, the resonance mechanism in the fly's ears generates a
mechanical interaural level difference (MILD) of up to 10 dB, de
novo, from none in the sound field. These MITDs and MILDs are passed on to the auditory afferents. Finally, the mechanoelectric sensory transduction in Ormia's auditory organs further
amplify the 55 µsec interaural time difference to ~350 µsec for a
5 kHz sound source, at 90° azimuth and 90 dB SPL, based on recording from the whole auditory nerve (Robert et al., 1996 ). The sensory interaural time difference reported here (Fig. 8b, e.g.) is
somewhat greater, possibly because of differences in recording
technique, stimulus level, and placement of the electrodes. In any
case, as a result of mechanical and mechanoneural processing of
interaural cues by the fly's auditory periphery and sensory system,
interaural level and time cues are generated that are of the same order
of magnitude as seen in other insect and vertebrate auditory systems. These cues are passed on to the auditory interneurons, for further processing.
Population coding and directionality
In addition to taking advantage of time coding properties of
single units in the afferent system, directional sensitivity of the
auditory system may benefit from the range fractionation of the entire
population of auditory afferents, divided along the dimension of
threshold intensity. Thus, at any given intensity level (at or above
threshold) for a 5 kHz tone, the proportion of afferent fibers
activated by that stimulus will depend on whether the origin of the
sound source is ipsilateral or contralateral to the auditory organ.
In Figure 9, we depict the thresholds of 28 afferents (all tuned to
~5 kHz) and showed that they are spread over a wide range of
thresholds, from 50 to 93 dB SPL. Such a wide dynamic range can be
fractionated as a function of sound intensity level in each auditory
channel, and the proportion of activated afferents in each channel can
be compared centrally. This could serve a basis for sound localization,
as pointed out by Römer et al. (1998) in his investigation of
auditory afferents in bush crickets. The proportion of the 28 afferents
that reaches spike threshold is plotted against the intensity level of
the stimulus that "recruits" them. As shown in Figure 9, only a
quarter, 10 of 28 afferents, had reached threshold at 75 dB; but fully
25 of 28 afferents had been recruited by 95 dB. A noteworthy
feature of the display is the gradual rate of recruitment from 65 dB to
90 dB, which we believe is relevant for directional sensitivity because
intensity dependent-recruitment of afferent activity is a function of
location of the sound source.
The dashed lines in Figure 9 illustrate how stimulus intensity is
encoded in the activity of different numbers of afferents (population
coding). The proportion of ipsilateral afferents that responded to a
stimulus intensity of 85 dB is ~90%, but the pool of afferents
recruited on the contralateral side is only ~38%. Simply switching
the sound source from one side to the other would turn on or off the
neural activity for half of the afferents in the sample pool. This
appears to be a highly efficient coding scheme for interaural intensity
level differences. The 10 dB interaural level difference in this
example is not unreasonable for O. ochracea. Robert et al.
(1998) measured 10 dB interaural differences in the mechanical response
of the tympanal membranes in laser vibrometry experiments.
Clearly, the auditory afferents of Ormia ochracea exhibit
directionally dependent differences in their activity within each auditory channel as well as between channels. Thus, ipsilateral sound
pulses elicit spikes at shorter response latencies than those elicited
in the contralateral afferent channel. Furthermore, a larger number of
afferents will be activated on the sound-ipsilateral side because of
the disparate vibration amplitudes of the mechanically coupled tympanal
membranes. The phasic discharge properties, low jitter, and the dynamic
range of afferent thresholds are essential features of physiology of
the afferents that allow them to code the direction of sound. Whether a
latency code or a population code is used by the central auditory
interneurons to "compute" source direction cannot be decided by the
data we present here and will be unresolved until recordings are made
in the CNS. What we present are the response properties of afferent
units, individually and collectively, in response to directional
sounds. It is clear that single units are acutely sensitive in the
temporal features of acoustic stimuli, but single unit responses are
probably not sufficient to account for the fly's directional acuity.
Alternatively, differences in the population coding of ipsilateral and
contralateral by different numbers of afferents in each channel offer a
feasible basis for Ormia's directional acuity.
It is clear that Ormia's ability to localize its cricket hosts by
hearing and homing in on the hosts' calling songs are enabled by
remarkable sensory adaptations, especially in the parasitoid fly's
auditory periphery, but as well by the response properties of its
auditory afferents. Further investigation of the auditory processing in
this inconspicuous fly is clearly warranted by recent reports of its
behavioral capabilities in sound localization (Mason et al., 2001 ;
Müller and Robert, 2001 ).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received July 20, 2001; revised May 13, 2002; accepted May 21, 2002.
We acknowledge the technical help of Marie Read and helpful discussions
with Drs. Andrew Mason, Tim Forrest, and Hamilton Farris.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Ronald R. Hoy, Department of
Neurobiology and Behavior, Cornell University, Seeley G. Mudd Hall,
Ithaca, NY 14853. E-mail: rrh3{at}cornell.edu.
 |
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