Neuron
Volume 78, Issue 5, 5 June 2013, Pages 936-948
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Article
Directional Hearing by Linear Summation of Binaural Inputs at the Medial Superior Olive

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neuron.2013.04.028Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • ITD tuning of MSO neurons can be predicted from their inputs

  • Inputs from both ears sum linearly

  • The nonlinear input-output relation helps in coincidence detection

Summary

Neurons in the medial superior olive (MSO) enable sound localization by their remarkable sensitivity to submillisecond interaural time differences (ITDs). Each MSO neuron has its own “best ITD” to which it responds optimally. A difference in physical path length of the excitatory inputs from both ears cannot fully account for the ITD tuning of MSO neurons. As a result, it is still debated how these inputs interact and whether the segregation of inputs to opposite dendrites, well-timed synaptic inhibition, or asymmetries in synaptic potentials or cellular morphology further optimize coincidence detection or ITD tuning. Using in vivo whole-cell and juxtacellular recordings, we show here that ITD tuning of MSO neurons is determined by the timing of their excitatory inputs. The inputs from both ears sum linearly, whereas spike probability depends nonlinearly on the size of synaptic inputs. This simple coincidence detection scheme thus makes accurate sound localization possible.

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These authors contributed equally to this work