Authors
Mounya Elhilali, Jonathan B Fritz, David J Klein, Jonathan Z Simon, Shihab A Shamma
Publication date
2004/2/4
Journal
Journal of neuroscience
Volume
24
Issue
5
Pages
1159-1172
Publisher
Society for Neuroscience
Description
Although single units in primary auditory cortex (A1) exhibit accurate timing in their phasic response to the onset of sound (precision of a few milliseconds), paradoxically, they are unable to sustain synchronized responses to repeated stimuli at rates much beyond 20 Hz. To explore the relationship between these two aspects of cortical response, we designed a broadband stimulus with a slowly modulated spectrotemporal envelope riding on top of a rapidly modulated waveform (or fine structure). Using this stimulus, we quantified the ability of cortical cells to encode independently and simultaneously the stimulus envelope and fine structure. Specifically, by reverse-correlating unit responses with these two stimulus dimensions, we measured the spectrotemporal response fields (STRFs) associated with the processing of the envelope, the fine structure, and the complete stimulus. A1 cells respond well to the slow …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
M Elhilali, JB Fritz, DJ Klein, JZ Simon, SA Shamma - Journal of neuroscience, 2004