1 / 19

studying barn owls in the laboratory sound intensity cues sound timing cues

PART 2: SENSORY WORLDS #08: PREY LOCATION IN BARN OWLS II. studying barn owls in the laboratory sound intensity cues sound timing cues neural pathways for sound location auditory space interaural time differences delay lines & coincidence detectors

mieko
Télécharger la présentation

studying barn owls in the laboratory sound intensity cues sound timing cues

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PART 2: SENSORY WORLDS #08: PREY LOCATION IN BARN OWLS II • studying barn owls in the laboratory • sound intensity cues • sound timing cues • neural pathways for sound location • auditory space • interaural time differences • delay lines & coincidence detectors • visual calibration of the auditory world • summary

  2. PART 2: SENSORY WORLDS #08: PREY LOCATION IN BARN OWLS II • studying barn owls in the laboratory • sound intensity cues • sound timing cues • neural pathways for sound location • auditory space • interaural time differences • delay lines & coincidence detectors • visual calibration of the auditory world • summary

  3. VISUAL CALIBRATION OF THE AUDITORY WORLD • owls are auditory & visual animals • systems integrated  locate source of stimulus • recall experimental set up...

  4. BARN OWLS IN THE LABORATORY • monitor head orientation behavior • used “search coil”  weak electric field • signal magnitude + sign  head position • ~ sounds • no echoes • total darkness • sound & head positions correlated by computer p.64 fig.3.2

  5. BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS • monaural occlusion experiments  location error • elevation • azimuth (minor) • 2 critical observations... • correction after weeks ? • young owls  yes • old owls  less • remove occlusion • error persists, but... • corrected / time p.67 fig.3.4

  6. BEHAVIORAL ANALYSIS • monaural occlusion experiments  location error • elevation • azimuth (minor) • other cues... vision ? • prisms  correct ~ visual offset p.67 fig.3.4

  7. normal • visual shift only • ...auditory shift • shift remains p.83 fig.3.15 VISUAL vs AUDITORY STIMULI • hypothesis: vision guides evaluation of auditory cues • raised young (sensitive) owls with prisms • do owls adjust auditory targeting ~ visual input ? • results:

  8. VISUAL vs AUDITORY STIMULI • developmental regulation of shift •  7 mo, shift ~ 20° • adults, shift only a few ° • results: • normal • visual shift only • ...auditory shift • shift remains p.83 fig.3.15

  9. NEURAL CORRELATES OF PLASTICITY • convergence: • azimuthal (ITD) & horizontal (ILD) info in ICX • auditory & visual information in optic tectum • receptive fields of optic tectum aligned in columns p.84 fig.3.16

  10. (A) multimodal space map in optic tectum (B) prisms shift visual receptive field (C) + 8 wks... auditory receptive field shifts p.85 fig.3.17 NEURAL CORRELATES OF PLASTICITY • receptive fields of optic tectum aligned in columns

  11. NEURAL CORRELATES OF PLASTICITY • what causes this shift in alignment ? • azimuthal plane... expect • horizontal shift in auditory perceptive fields • induced by abnormal visual cues • accompanied by ~ shift in ITDs of tectal neurons p.85 fig.3.17

  12. (A) optic tectum neurons • normal  visual tuning @ 0 s (center of field) • 8 wks of prism  visual tuning @ ~ 50 s p.86 fig.3.18 (B) optic tectum neuron arrays • shifts follow pattern of visual experience NEURAL CORRELATES OF PLASTICITY • adaptation of ITD map ~ visual experience

  13. p.87 fig.3.19 (A) initial: az.= 0°, ITD = 0 s (B) transition: az., ITD  (C) shift: az.= 23°, ITD = 40 s NEURAL CORRELATES OF PLASTICITY • ITD tuning curves in ICX neurons of prism-reared owls • shaded = normal & learned • 2 stages of ITD adjustment

  14. SENSITIVE PERIOD FOR CALIBRATION • visual experience modification of auditory localization • young < juvenile > adult  60 days 200  • monaural occlusion • displacement prisms • optic tectum ITD tuning (A) juveniles: sensitive to prisms (B) adults: naïve – insensitive to prisms () experienced – sensitive () p.88 fig.3.20

  15. SITES OF ADAPTIVE PLASTICITY • visual horizontal displacement  • auditory space maps • optic tectum ITD map • auditory space maps: ICC ICX  op.tectum p.90 fig.3.21

  16. SITES OF ADAPTIVE PLASTICITY • auditory space maps: ICC ICX  op.tectum • prism reared owls: • ICC map normal • ICX map shifted ~ optic tectum shift • anatomy • normal ICC-ICX input • additional ICC-ICX input to shifted ITD region • accounts for recovery during lifetime  normal • accounts for rapid readjustment  prisms again p.90 fig.3.21

  17. SITES OF ADAPTIVE PLASTICITY • cellular mechanisms ? • involves: • glutamate - excitatory neurotransmitter • glutamate receptor - NMDA receptor p.90 fig.3.21

  18. SUMMARY • experiments identified 2 critical auditory cues... • time info, ITD  NM  azimuthal information • intensity info, ILD  NA  elevation information • parallel processed, cochlear nuclei  ICX • ITD & ILD information  ICX space-specific neurons • each neuron  receptive field in auditory space • emergent / unique property (not signal addition) • coordinated auditory & visual world • visual tuning of auditory space • young / juvenile > adult

  19. SUMMARY • multimodal maps of sensory world in optic tectum • auditory maps can shift  register with visual • young < juvenile > adult • realignment by new ICC  ICX connections • connections persistent

More Related