134 results on '"Sanes DH"'
Search Results
2. Regeneration of the auditory midbrain intercommissural projection in organotypic culture
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Hafidi, A, primary, Sanes, DH, additional, and Hillman, DE, additional
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- 1995
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3. Depression of developing neuromuscular synapses induced by repetitive postsynaptic depolarizations
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Lo, YJ, primary, Lin, YC, additional, Sanes, DH, additional, and Poo, MM, additional
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- 1994
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4. Synaptic inhibition influences the temporal coding properties of medial superior olivary neurons: an in vitro study
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Grothe, B, primary and Sanes, DH, additional
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- 1994
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5. The development of synaptic function and integration in the central auditory system
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Sanes, DH, primary
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- 1993
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6. An in vitro analysis of sound localization mechanisms in the gerbil lateral superior olive
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Sanes, DH, primary
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- 1990
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7. Development of glycine receptor distribution in the lateral superior olive of the gerbil
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Sanes, DH, primary and Wooten, GF, additional
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- 1987
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8. Quantitative distribution of the glycine receptor in the auditory brain stem of the gerbil
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Sanes, DH, primary, Geary, WA, additional, Wooten, GF, additional, and Rubel, EW, additional
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- 1987
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9. The sharpening of frequency tuning curves requires patterned activity during development in the mouse, Mus musculus
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Sanes, DH, primary and Constantine-Paton, M, additional
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- 1985
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10. The ontogeny of inhibition and excitation in the gerbil lateral superior olive
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Sanes, DH, primary and Rubel, EW, additional
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- 1988
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11. Vocal Call Locator Benchmark (VCL) for localizing rodent vocalizations from multi-channel audio.
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Peterson RE, Tanelus A, Ick C, Mimica B, Francis N, Ivan VJ, Choudhri A, Falkner AL, Murthy M, Schneider DM, Sanes DH, and Williams AH
- Abstract
Understanding the behavioral and neural dynamics of social interactions is a goal of contemporary neuroscience. Many machine learning methods have emerged in recent years to make sense of complex video and neurophysiological data that result from these experiments. Less focus has been placed on understanding how animals process acoustic information, including social vocalizations. A critical step to bridge this gap is determining the senders and receivers of acoustic information in social interactions. While sound source localization (SSL) is a classic problem in signal processing, existing approaches are limited in their ability to localize animal-generated sounds in standard laboratory environments. Advances in deep learning methods for SSL are likely to help address these limitations, however there are currently no publicly available models, datasets, or benchmarks to systematically evaluate SSL algorithms in the domain of bioacoustics. Here, we present the VCL Benchmark: the first large-scale dataset for benchmarking SSL algorithms in rodents. We acquired synchronized video and multi-channel audio recordings of 767,295 sounds with annotated ground truth sources across 9 conditions. The dataset provides benchmarks which evaluate SSL performance on real data, simulated acoustic data, and a mixture of real and simulated data. We intend for this benchmark to facilitate knowledge transfer between the neuroscience and acoustic machine learning communities, which have had limited overlap.
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- 2024
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12. Unsupervised discovery of family specific vocal usage in the Mongolian gerbil.
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Peterson RE, Choudhri A, Mitelut C, Tanelus A, Capo-Battaglia A, Williams AH, Schneider DM, and Sanes DH
- Abstract
In nature, animal vocalizations can provide crucial information about identity, including kinship and hierarchy. However, lab-based vocal behavior is typically studied during brief interactions between animals with no prior social relationship, and under environmental conditions with limited ethological relevance. Here, we address this gap by establishing long-term acoustic recordings from Mongolian gerbil families, a core social group that uses an array of sonic and ultrasonic vocalizations. Three separate gerbil families were transferred to an enlarged environment and continuous 20-day audio recordings were obtained. Using a variational autoencoder (VAE) to quantify 583,237 vocalizations, we show that gerbils exhibit a more elaborate vocal repertoire than has been previously reported and that vocal repertoire usage differs significantly by family. By performing gaussian mixture model clustering on the VAE latent space, we show that families preferentially use characteristic sets of vocal clusters and that these usage preferences remain stable over weeks. Furthermore, gerbils displayed family-specific transitions between vocal clusters. Since gerbils live naturally as extended families in complex underground burrows that are adjacent to other families, these results suggest the presence of a vocal dialect which could be exploited by animals to represent kinship. These findings position the Mongolian gerbil as a compelling animal model to study the neural basis of vocal communication and demonstrates the potential for using unsupervised machine learning with uninterrupted acoustic recordings to gain insights into naturalistic animal behavior., Competing Interests: Competing Interest Statement The authors declare no competing financial interests.
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- 2024
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13. Developmental hearing loss-induced perceptual deficits are rescued by genetic restoration of cortical inhibition.
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Masri S, Mowery TM, Fair R, and Sanes DH
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- Animals, Receptors, GABA-B metabolism, Receptors, GABA-B genetics, Glutamate Decarboxylase metabolism, Glutamate Decarboxylase genetics, Receptors, GABA-A metabolism, Receptors, GABA-A genetics, Parvalbumins metabolism, Parvalbumins genetics, Auditory Perception physiology, Pyramidal Cells metabolism, Pyramidal Cells physiology, Genetic Vectors genetics, Auditory Cortex metabolism, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Gerbillinae, Hearing Loss genetics, Hearing Loss physiopathology
- Abstract
Even a transient period of hearing loss during the developmental critical period can induce long-lasting deficits in temporal and spectral perception. These perceptual deficits correlate with speech perception in humans. In gerbils, these hearing loss-induced perceptual deficits are correlated with a reduction of both ionotropic GABA
A and metabotropic GABAB receptor-mediated synaptic inhibition in auditory cortex, but most research on critical period plasticity has focused on GABAA receptors. Therefore, we developed viral vectors to express proteins that would upregulate gerbil postsynaptic inhibitory receptor subunits (GABAA , Gabra1 ; GABAB , Gabbr1b ) in pyramidal neurons, and an enzyme that mediates GABA synthesis ( GAD65 ) presynaptically in parvalbumin-expressing interneurons. A transient period of developmental hearing loss during the auditory critical period significantly impaired perceptual performance on two auditory tasks: amplitude modulation depth detection and spectral modulation depth detection. We then tested the capacity of each vector to restore perceptual performance on these auditory tasks. While both GABA receptor vectors increased the amplitude of cortical inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, only viral expression of postsynaptic GABAB receptors improved perceptual thresholds to control levels. Similarly, presynaptic GAD65 expression improved perceptual performance on spectral modulation detection. These findings suggest that recovering performance on auditory perceptual tasks depends on GABAB receptor-dependent transmission at the auditory cortex parvalbumin to pyramidal synapse and point to potential therapeutic targets for developmental sensory disorders., Competing Interests: Competing interests statement:S.M. and D.H.S. submitted a patent application for the viruses used to express Gabra1 and Gabbr1b (U.S. Patent Application No. 63/359,724), and a provisional patent application for the virus to express GAD65 (U.S. Patent Provisional Application No. 63/507,894). R.F. and T.M.M. declare no competing financial interests.- Published
- 2024
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14. A behavioral roadmap for the development of agency in the rodent.
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Mitelut C, Diez Castro M, Peterson RE, Goncalves M, Li J, Gamer MM, Nilsson SRO, Pereira TD, and Sanes DH
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Behavioral interactions within the nuclear family play a pivotal role in the emergence of agency: the capacity to regulate physiological, psychological and social needs. While behaviors may develop over days or weeks in line with nervous system maturation, individual behaviors can occur on sub-second time scales making it challenging to track development in lab studies with brief observation periods, or in field studies with limited temporal precision and animal identification. Here we study development in families of gerbils, a highly social rodent, collecting tens of millions of behavior time points and implementing machine learning methods to track individual subjects. We provided maturing gerbils with a large, undisturbed environment between postnatal day 15 and the age at which they would typically disperse from the family unit (day 30). We identified complex and distinct developmental trajectories for food and water acquisition, solitary exploration, and social behaviors, some of which displayed sex differences and diurnal patterns. Our work supports the emergence of well-delineated autonomous and social behavior phenotypes that correlate with specific periods and loci of neural maturation.
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- 2024
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15. Cingulate cortex facilitates auditory perception under challenging listening conditions.
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Anbuhl KL, Diez Castro M, Lee NA, Lee VS, and Sanes DH
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We often exert greater cognitive resources (i.e., listening effort) to understand speech under challenging acoustic conditions. This mechanism can be overwhelmed in those with hearing loss, resulting in cognitive fatigue in adults, and potentially impeding language acquisition in children. However, the neural mechanisms that support listening effort are uncertain. Evidence from human studies suggest that the cingulate cortex is engaged under difficult listening conditions, and may exert top-down modulation of the auditory cortex (AC). Here, we asked whether the gerbil cingulate cortex (Cg) sends anatomical projections to the AC that facilitate perceptual performance. To model challenging listening conditions, we used a sound discrimination task in which stimulus parameters were presented in either 'Easy' or 'Hard' blocks (i.e., long or short stimulus duration, respectively). Gerbils achieved statistically identical psychometric performance in Easy and Hard blocks. Anatomical tracing experiments revealed a strong, descending projection from layer 2/3 of the Cg1 subregion of the cingulate cortex to superficial and deep layers of primary and dorsal AC. To determine whether Cg improves task performance under challenging conditions, we bilaterally infused muscimol to inactivate Cg1, and found that psychometric thresholds were degraded for only Hard blocks. To test whether the Cg-to-AC projection facilitates task performance, we chemogenetically inactivated these inputs and found that performance was only degraded during Hard blocks. Taken together, the results reveal a descending cortical pathway that facilitates perceptual performance during challenging listening conditions., Significance Statement: Sensory perception often occurs under challenging conditions, such a noisy background or dim environment, yet stimulus sensitivity can remain unaffected. One hypothesis is that cognitive resources are recruited to the task, thereby facilitating perceptual performance. Here, we identify a top-down cortical circuit, from cingulate to auditory cortex in the gerbils, that supports auditory perceptual performance under challenging listening conditions. This pathway is a plausible circuit that supports effortful listening, and may be degraded by hearing loss.
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- 2023
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16. Sensory cortex plasticity supports auditory social learning.
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Paraouty N, Yao JD, Varnet L, Chou CN, Chung S, and Sanes DH
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- Animals, Sense Organs, Auditory Perception, Cues, Gerbillinae, Social Learning, Auditory Cortex
- Abstract
Social learning (SL) through experience with conspecifics can facilitate the acquisition of many behaviors. Thus, when Mongolian gerbils are exposed to a demonstrator performing an auditory discrimination task, their subsequent task acquisition is facilitated, even in the absence of visual cues. Here, we show that transient inactivation of auditory cortex (AC) during exposure caused a significant delay in task acquisition during the subsequent practice phase, suggesting that AC activity is necessary for SL. Moreover, social exposure induced an improvement in AC neuron sensitivity to auditory task cues. The magnitude of neural change during exposure correlated with task acquisition during practice. In contrast, exposure to only auditory task cues led to poorer neurometric and behavioral outcomes. Finally, social information during exposure was encoded in the AC of observer animals. Together, our results suggest that auditory SL is supported by AC neuron plasticity occurring during social exposure and prior to behavioral performance., (© 2023. Springer Nature Limited.)
- Published
- 2023
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17. Developmental hearing loss-induced perceptual deficits are rescued by cortical expression of GABA B receptors.
- Author
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Masri S, Fair R, Mowery TM, and Sanes DH
- Abstract
Even transient periods of developmental hearing loss during the developmental critical period have been linked to long-lasting deficits in auditory perception, including temporal and spectral processing, which correlate with speech perception and educational attainment. In gerbils, hearing loss-induced perceptual deficits are correlated with a reduction of both ionotropic GABA
A and metabotropic GABAB receptor-mediated synaptic inhibition in auditory cortex, but most research on critical period plasticity has focused on GABAA receptors. We developed viral vectors to express both endogenous GABAA or GABAB receptor subunits in auditory cortex and tested their capacity to restore perception of temporal and spectral auditory cues following critical period hearing loss in the Mongolian gerbil. HL significantly impaired perception of both temporal and spectral auditory cues. While both vectors similarly increased IPSCs in auditory cortex, only overexpression of GABAB receptors improved perceptual thresholds after HL to be similar to those of animals without developmental hearing loss. These findings identify the GABAB receptor as an important regulator of sensory perception in cortex and point to potential therapeutic targets for developmental sensory disorders., Competing Interests: Conflict of interest The authors whose names are listed immediately above certify that they have no affiliations with or involvement in any organization or entity with any financial, or non-financial interest in the subject matter or materials discussed in this manuscript.- Published
- 2023
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18. Transformation of acoustic information to sensory decision variables in the parietal cortex.
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Yao JD, Zemlianova KO, Hocker DL, Savin C, Constantinople CM, Chung S, and Sanes DH
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- Animals, Auditory Perception physiology, Acoustic Stimulation, Acoustics, Gerbillinae, Parietal Lobe physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology
- Abstract
The process by which sensory evidence contributes to perceptual choices requires an understanding of its transformation into decision variables. Here, we address this issue by evaluating the neural representation of acoustic information in the auditory cortex-recipient parietal cortex, while gerbils either performed a two-alternative forced-choice auditory discrimination task or while they passively listened to identical acoustic stimuli. During task engagement, stimulus identity decoding performance from simultaneously recorded parietal neurons significantly correlated with psychometric sensitivity. In contrast, decoding performance during passive listening was significantly reduced. Principal component and geometric analyses revealed the emergence of low-dimensional encoding of linearly separable manifolds with respect to stimulus identity and decision, but only during task engagement. These findings confirm that the parietal cortex mediates a transition of acoustic representations into decision-related variables. Finally, using a clustering analysis, we identified three functionally distinct subpopulations of neurons that each encoded task-relevant information during separate temporal segments of a trial. Taken together, our findings demonstrate how parietal cortex neurons integrate and transform encoded auditory information to guide sound-driven perceptual decisions.
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- 2023
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19. A Redundant Cortical Code for Speech Envelope.
- Author
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Penikis KB and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Male, Animals, Female, Humans, Auditory Perception physiology, Speech, Acoustic Stimulation, Sound, Speech Perception physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Animal communication sounds exhibit complex temporal structure because of the amplitude fluctuations that comprise the sound envelope. In human speech, envelope modulations drive synchronized activity in auditory cortex (AC), which correlates strongly with comprehension (Giraud and Poeppel, 2012; Peelle and Davis, 2012; Haegens and Zion Golumbic, 2018). Studies of envelope coding in single neurons, performed in nonhuman animals, have focused on periodic amplitude modulation (AM) stimuli and use response metrics that are not easy to juxtapose with data from humans. In this study, we sought to bridge these fields. Specifically, we looked directly at the temporal relationship between stimulus envelope and spiking, and we assessed whether the apparent diversity across neurons' AM responses contributes to the population representation of speech-like sound envelopes. We gathered responses from single neurons to vocoded speech stimuli and compared them to sinusoidal AM responses in auditory cortex (AC) of alert, freely moving Mongolian gerbils of both sexes. While AC neurons displayed heterogeneous tuning to AM rate, their temporal dynamics were stereotyped. Preferred response phases accumulated near the onsets of sinusoidal AM periods for slower rates (<8 Hz), and an over-representation of amplitude edges was apparent in population responses to both sinusoidal AM and vocoded speech envelopes. Crucially, this encoding bias imparted a decoding benefit: a classifier could discriminate vocoded speech stimuli using summed population activity, while higher frequency modulations required a more sophisticated decoder that tracked spiking responses from individual cells. Together, our results imply that the envelope structure relevant to parsing an acoustic stream could be read-out from a distributed, redundant population code. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Animal communication sounds have rich temporal structure and are often produced in extended sequences, including the syllabic structure of human speech. Although the auditory cortex (AC) is known to play a crucial role in representing speech syllables, the contribution of individual neurons remains uncertain. Here, we characterized the representations of both simple, amplitude-modulated sounds and complex, speech-like stimuli within a broad population of cortical neurons, and we found an overrepresentation of amplitude edges. Thus, a phasic, redundant code in auditory cortex can provide a mechanistic explanation for segmenting acoustic streams like human speech., (Copyright © 2023 the authors.)
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- 2023
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20. Auditory processing remains sensitive to environmental experience during adolescence in a rodent model.
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Anbuhl KL, Yao JD, Hotz RA, Mowery TM, and Sanes DH
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- Animals, Auditory Perception physiology, Gerbillinae, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Hearing Loss
- Abstract
Elevated neural plasticity during development contributes to dramatic improvements in perceptual, motor, and cognitive skills. However, malleable neural circuits are vulnerable to environmental influences that may disrupt behavioral maturation. While these risks are well-established prior to sexual maturity (i.e., critical periods), the degree of neural vulnerability during adolescence remains uncertain. Here, we induce transient hearing loss (HL) spanning adolescence in gerbils, and ask whether behavioral and neural maturation are disrupted. We find that adolescent HL causes a significant perceptual deficit that can be attributed to degraded auditory cortex processing, as assessed with wireless single neuron recordings and within-session population-level analyses. Finally, auditory cortex brain slices from adolescent HL animals reveal synaptic deficits that are distinct from those typically observed after critical period deprivation. Taken together, these results show that diminished adolescent sensory experience can cause long-lasting behavioral deficits that originate, in part, from a dysfunctional cortical circuit., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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21. Publisher Correction: SLEAP: A deep learning system for multi-animal pose tracking.
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Pereira TD, Tabris N, Matsliah A, Turner DM, Li J, Ravindranath S, Papadoyannis ES, Normand E, Deutsch DS, Wang ZY, McKenzie-Smith GC, Mitelut CC, Castro MD, D'Uva J, Kislin M, Sanes DH, Kocher SD, Wang SS, Falkner AL, Shaevitz JW, and Murthy M
- Published
- 2022
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22. SLEAP: A deep learning system for multi-animal pose tracking.
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Pereira TD, Tabris N, Matsliah A, Turner DM, Li J, Ravindranath S, Papadoyannis ES, Normand E, Deutsch DS, Wang ZY, McKenzie-Smith GC, Mitelut CC, Castro MD, D'Uva J, Kislin M, Sanes DH, Kocher SD, Wang SS, Falkner AL, Shaevitz JW, and Murthy M
- Subjects
- Algorithms, Animals, Behavior, Animal, Head, Machine Learning, Mice, Social Behavior, Deep Learning
- Abstract
The desire to understand how the brain generates and patterns behavior has driven rapid methodological innovation in tools to quantify natural animal behavior. While advances in deep learning and computer vision have enabled markerless pose estimation in individual animals, extending these to multiple animals presents unique challenges for studies of social behaviors or animals in their natural environments. Here we present Social LEAP Estimates Animal Poses (SLEAP), a machine learning system for multi-animal pose tracking. This system enables versatile workflows for data labeling, model training and inference on previously unseen data. SLEAP features an accessible graphical user interface, a standardized data model, a reproducible configuration system, over 30 model architectures, two approaches to part grouping and two approaches to identity tracking. We applied SLEAP to seven datasets across flies, bees, mice and gerbils to systematically evaluate each approach and architecture, and we compare it with other existing approaches. SLEAP achieves greater accuracy and speeds of more than 800 frames per second, with latencies of less than 3.5 ms at full 1,024 × 1,024 image resolution. This makes SLEAP usable for real-time applications, which we demonstrate by controlling the behavior of one animal on the basis of the tracking and detection of social interactions with another animal., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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23. Dopaminergic signaling supports auditory social learning.
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Paraouty N, Rizzuto CR, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- 2,3,4,5-Tetrahydro-7,8-dihydroxy-1-phenyl-1H-3-benzazepine pharmacology, Animals, Discrimination Learning physiology, Dopamine Antagonists pharmacology, Dopaminergic Neurons drug effects, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Reward, Video Recording, Auditory Perception physiology, Dopaminergic Neurons physiology, Social Learning physiology
- Abstract
Explicit rewards are commonly used to reinforce a behavior, a form of learning that engages the dopaminergic neuromodulatory system. In contrast, skill acquisition can display dramatic improvements from a social learning experience, even though the observer receives no explicit reward. Here, we test whether a dopaminergic signal contributes to social learning in naïve gerbils that are exposed to, and learn from, a skilled demonstrator performing an auditory discrimination task. Following five exposure sessions, naïve observer gerbils were allowed to practice the auditory task and their performance was assessed across days. We first tested the effect of an explicit food reward in the observer's compartment that was yoked to the demonstrator's performance during exposure sessions. Naïve observer gerbils with the yoked reward learned the discrimination task significantly faster, as compared to unrewarded observers. The effect of this explicit reward was abolished by administration of a D1/D5 dopamine receptor antagonist during the exposure sessions. Similarly, the D1/D5 antagonist reduced the rate of learning in unrewarded observers. To test whether a dopaminergic signal was sufficient to enhance social learning, we administered a D1/D5 receptor agonist during the exposure sessions in which no reward was present and found that the rate of learning occurred significantly faster. Finally, a quantitative analysis of vocalizations during the exposure sessions suggests one behavioral strategy that contributes to social learning. Together, these results are consistent with a dopamine-dependent reward signal during social learning.
- Published
- 2021
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24. Temporal Encoding is Required for Categorization, But Not Discrimination.
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Yao JD and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Electrodes, Implanted, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Acoustic Stimulation methods, Action Potentials physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Discrimination Learning physiology
- Abstract
Core auditory cortex (AC) neurons encode slow fluctuations of acoustic stimuli with temporally patterned activity. However, whether temporal encoding is necessary to explain auditory perceptual skills remains uncertain. Here, we recorded from gerbil AC neurons while they discriminated between a 4-Hz amplitude modulation (AM) broadband noise and AM rates >4 Hz. We found a proportion of neurons possessed neural thresholds based on spike pattern or spike count that were better than the recorded session's behavioral threshold, suggesting that spike count could provide sufficient information for this perceptual task. A population decoder that relied on temporal information outperformed a decoder that relied on spike count alone, but the spike count decoder still remained sufficient to explain average behavioral performance. This leaves open the possibility that more demanding perceptual judgments require temporal information. Thus, we asked whether accurate classification of different AM rates between 4 and 12 Hz required the information contained in AC temporal discharge patterns. Indeed, accurate classification of these AM stimuli depended on the inclusion of temporal information rather than spike count alone. Overall, our results compare two different representations of time-varying acoustic features that can be accessed by downstream circuits required for perceptual judgments., (Published by Oxford University Press 2021.)
- Published
- 2021
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25. Parietal Cortex Is Required for the Integration of Acoustic Evidence.
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Yao JD, Gimoto J, Constantinople CM, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Female, Male, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Behavior, Animal physiology, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Gerbillinae physiology, Parietal Lobe physiology
- Abstract
Sensory-driven decisions are formed by accumulating information over time. Although parietal cortex activity is thought to represent accumulated evidence for sensory-based decisions, recent perturbation studies in rodents and non-human primates have challenged the hypothesis that these representations actually influence behavior. Here, we asked whether the parietal cortex integrates acoustic features from auditory cortical inputs during a perceptual decision-making task. If so, we predicted that selective inactivation of this projection should impair subjects' ability to accumulate sensory evidence. We trained gerbils to perform an auditory discrimination task and obtained measures of integration time as a readout of evidence accumulation capability. Minimum integration time was calculated behaviorally as the shortest stimulus duration for which subjects could discriminate the acoustic signals. Direct pharmacological inactivation of parietal cortex increased minimum integration times, suggesting its role in the behavior. To determine the specific impact of sensory evidence, we chemogenetically inactivated the excitatory projections from auditory cortex to parietal cortex and found this was sufficient to increase minimum behavioral integration times. Our signal-detection-theory-based model accurately replicated behavioral outcomes and indicated that the deficits in task performance were plausibly explained by elevated sensory noise. Together, our findings provide causal evidence that parietal cortex plays a role in the network that integrates auditory features for perceptual judgments., Competing Interests: Declaration of Interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2020
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26. Social learning exploits the available auditory or visual cues.
- Author
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Paraouty N, Charbonneau JA, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Cues, Discrimination Learning, Discrimination, Psychological physiology, Gerbillinae physiology, Social Behavior, Auditory Perception physiology, Imitative Behavior physiology, Social Learning physiology, Social Skills, Visual Perception physiology
- Abstract
The ability to acquire a behavior can be facilitated by exposure to a conspecific demonstrator. Such social learning occurs under a range of conditions in nature. Here, we tested the idea that social learning can benefit from any available sensory cue, thereby permitting learning under different natural conditions. The ability of naïve gerbils to learn a sound discrimination task following 5 days of exposure adjacent to a demonstrator gerbil was tested in the presence or absence of visual cues. Naïve gerbils acquired the task significantly faster in either condition, as compared to controls. We also found that exposure to a demonstrator was more potent in facilitating learning, as compared to exposure to the sounds used to perform the discrimination task. Therefore, social learning was found to be flexible and equally efficient in the auditory or visual domains.
- Published
- 2020
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27. Preserving Inhibition during Developmental Hearing Loss Rescues Auditory Learning and Perception.
- Author
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Mowery TM, Caras ML, Hassan SI, Wang DJ, Dimidschstein J, Fishell G, and Sanes DH
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- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Auditory Perception physiology, GABAergic Neurons physiology, Hearing Loss physiopathology, Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials physiology, Learning physiology
- Abstract
Transient periods of childhood hearing loss can induce deficits in aural communication that persist long after auditory thresholds have returned to normal, reflecting long-lasting impairments to the auditory CNS. Here, we asked whether these behavioral deficits could be reversed by treating one of the central impairments: reduction of inhibitory strength. Male and female gerbils received bilateral earplugs to induce a mild, reversible hearing loss during the critical period of auditory cortex development. After earplug removal and the return of normal auditory thresholds, we trained and tested animals on an amplitude modulation detection task. Transient developmental hearing loss induced both learning and perceptual deficits, which were entirely corrected by treatment with a selective GABA reuptake inhibitor (SGRI). To explore the mechanistic basis for these behavioral findings, we recorded the amplitudes of GABA
A and GABAB receptor-mediated IPSPs in auditory cortical and thalamic brain slices. In hearing loss-reared animals, cortical IPSP amplitudes were significantly reduced within a few days of hearing loss onset, and this reduction persisted into adulthood. SGRI treatment during the critical period prevented the hearing loss-induced reduction of IPSP amplitudes; but when administered after the critical period, it only restored GABAB receptor-mediated IPSP amplitudes. These effects were driven, in part, by the ability of SGRI to upregulate α1 subunit-dependent GABAA responses. Similarly, SGRI prevented the hearing loss-induced reduction of GABAA and GABAB IPSPs in the ventral nucleus of the medial geniculate body. Thus, by maintaining, or subsequently rescuing, GABAergic transmission in the central auditory thalamocortical pathway, some perceptual and cognitive deficits induced by developmental hearing loss can be prevented. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT Even a temporary period of childhood hearing loss can induce communication deficits that persist long after auditory thresholds return to normal. These deficits may arise from long-lasting central impairments, including the loss of synaptic inhibition. Here, we asked whether hearing loss-induced behavioral deficits could be reversed by reinstating normal inhibitory strength. Gerbils reared with transient hearing loss displayed both learning and perceptual deficits. However, when animals were treated with a selective GABA reuptake inhibitor during or after hearing loss, behavioral deficits were entirely corrected. This behavioral recovery was correlated with the return of normal thalamic and cortical inhibitory function. Thus, some perceptual and cognitive deficits induced by developmental hearing loss were prevented with a treatment that rescues a central synaptic property., (Copyright © 2019 the authors.)- Published
- 2019
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28. De novo sequencing and initial annotation of the Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) genome.
- Author
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Zorio DAR, Monsma S, Sanes DH, Golding NL, Rubel EW, and Wang Y
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Male, Molecular Sequence Annotation, Genome, Gerbillinae genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA
- Abstract
The Mongolian gerbil (Meriones unguiculatus) is a member of the rodent family that displays several features not found in mice or rats, including sensory specializations and social patterns more similar to those in humans. These features have made gerbils a valuable animal for research studies of auditory and visual processing, brain development, learning and memory, and neurological disorders. Here, we report the whole gerbil annotated genome sequence, and identify important similarities and differences to the human and mouse genomes. We further analyze the chromosomal structure of eight genes with high relevance for controlling neural signaling and demonstrate a high degree of homology between these genes in mouse and gerbil. This homology increases the likelihood that individual genes can be rapidly identified in gerbil and used for genetic manipulations. The availability of the gerbil genome provides a foundation for advancing our knowledge towards understanding evolution, behavior and neural function in mammals. ACCESSION NUMBER: The Whole Genome Shotgun sequence data from this project has been deposited at DDBJ/ENA/GenBank under the accession NHTI00000000. The version described in this paper is version NHTI01000000. The fragment reads, and mate pair reads have been deposited in the Sequence Read Archive under BioSample accession SAMN06897401., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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29. Neural Variability Limits Adolescent Skill Learning.
- Author
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Caras ML and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Aging psychology, Animals, Auditory Cortex cytology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Conditioning, Operant physiology, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Perception physiology, Psychomotor Performance physiology, Learning physiology, Motor Skills physiology
- Abstract
Skill learning is fundamental to the acquisition of many complex behaviors that emerge during development. For example, years of practice give rise to perceptual improvements that contribute to mature speech and language skills. While fully honed learning skills might be thought to offer an advantage during the juvenile period, the ability to learn actually continues to develop through childhood and adolescence, suggesting that the neural mechanisms that support skill learning are slow to mature. To address this issue, we asked whether the rate and magnitude of perceptual learning varies as a function of age as male and female gerbils trained on an auditory task. Adolescents displayed a slower rate of perceptual learning compared with their young and mature counterparts. We recorded auditory cortical neuron activity from a subset of adolescent and adult gerbils as they underwent perceptual training. While training enhanced the sensitivity of most adult units, the sensitivity of many adolescent units remained unchanged, or even declined across training days. Therefore, the average rate of cortical improvement was significantly slower in adolescents compared with adults. Both smaller differences between sound-evoked response magnitudes and greater trial-to-trial response fluctuations contributed to the poorer sensitivity of individual adolescent neurons. Together, these findings suggest that elevated sensory neural variability limits adolescent skill learning. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT The ability to learn new skills emerges gradually as children age. This prolonged development, often lasting well into adolescence, suggests that children, teens, and adults may rely on distinct neural strategies to improve their sensory and motor capabilities. Here, we found that practice-based improvement on a sound detection task is slower in adolescent gerbils than in younger or older animals. Neural recordings made during training revealed that practice enhanced the sound sensitivity of adult cortical neurons, but had a weaker effect in adolescents. This latter finding was partially explained by the fact that adolescent neural responses were more variable than in adults. Our results suggest that one mechanistic basis of adult-like skill learning is a reduction in neural response variability., (Copyright © 2019 the authors.)
- Published
- 2019
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30. Optogenetic auditory fMRI reveals the effects of visual cortical inputs on auditory midbrain response.
- Author
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Leong ATL, Dong CM, Gao PP, Chan RW, To A, Sanes DH, and Wu EX
- Subjects
- Animals, Pyramidal Cells, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Auditory Perception, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem, Inferior Colliculi diagnostic imaging, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Optogenetics, Visual Cortex diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Sensory cortices contain extensive descending (corticofugal) pathways, yet their impact on brainstem processing - particularly across sensory systems - remains poorly understood. In the auditory system, the inferior colliculus (IC) in the midbrain receives cross-modal inputs from the visual cortex (VC). However, the influences from VC on auditory midbrain processing are unclear. To investigate whether and how visual cortical inputs affect IC auditory responses, the present study combines auditory blood-oxygenation-level-dependent (BOLD) functional MRI (fMRI) with cell-type specific optogenetic manipulation of visual cortex. The results show that predominant optogenetic excitation of the excitatory pyramidal neurons in the infragranular layers of the primary VC enhances the noise-evoked BOLD fMRI responses within the IC. This finding reveals that inputs from VC influence and facilitate basic sound processing in the auditory midbrain. Such combined optogenetic and auditory fMRI approach can shed light on the large-scale modulatory effects of corticofugal pathways and guide detailed electrophysiological studies in the future.
- Published
- 2018
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31. Developmental deprivation-induced perceptual and cortical processing deficits in awake-behaving animals.
- Author
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Yao JD and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Brain Stem physiology, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Neurons physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Hearing Loss physiopathology, Sensory Deprivation physiology, Wakefulness physiology
- Abstract
Sensory deprivation during development induces lifelong changes to central nervous system function that are associated with perceptual impairments. However, the relationship between neural and behavioral deficits is uncertain due to a lack of simultaneous measurements during task performance. Therefore, we telemetrically recorded from auditory cortex neurons in gerbils reared with developmental conductive hearing loss as they performed an auditory task in which rapid fluctuations in amplitude are detected. These data were compared to a measure of auditory brainstem temporal processing from each animal. We found that developmental HL diminished behavioral performance, but did not alter brainstem temporal processing. However, the simultaneous assessment of neural and behavioral processing revealed that perceptual deficits were associated with a degraded cortical population code that could be explained by greater trial-to-trial response variability. Our findings suggest that the perceptual limitations that attend early hearing loss are best explained by an encoding deficit in auditory cortex., Competing Interests: JY, DS No competing interests declared, (© 2018, Yao et al.)
- Published
- 2018
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32. GABAergic inhibition gates excitatory LTP in perirhinal cortex.
- Author
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Kotak VC, Mirallave A, Mowery TM, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Bicuculline pharmacology, Electric Stimulation, Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials drug effects, Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials physiology, GABA Antagonists pharmacology, Gerbillinae, Long-Term Potentiation drug effects, Microelectrodes, Neural Inhibition drug effects, Neurons drug effects, Neurons metabolism, Perirhinal Cortex drug effects, Tissue Culture Techniques, Long-Term Potentiation physiology, Neural Inhibition physiology, Perirhinal Cortex metabolism, Receptors, GABA metabolism
- Abstract
The perirhinal cortex (PRh) is a key region downstream of auditory cortex (ACx) that processes familiarity linked mnemonic signaling. In gerbils, ACx-driven EPSPs recorded in PRh neurons are largely shunted by GABAergic inhibition (Kotak et al., 2015, Frontiers in Neural Circuits, 9). To determine whether inhibitory shunting prevents the induction of excitatory long-term potentiation (e-LTP), we stimulated ACx-recipient PRh in a brain slice preparation using theta burst stimulation (TBS). Under control conditions, without GABA blockers, the majority of PRh neurons exhibited long-term depression. A very low concentration of bicuculline increased EPSP amplitude, but under this condition TBS did not significantly increase e-LTP induction. Since PRh synaptic inhibition included a GABA
B receptor-mediated component, we added a GABAB receptor antagonist. When both GABAA and GABAB receptors were blocked, TBS reliably induced e-LTP in a majority of PRh neurons. We conclude that GABAergic transmission is a vital mechanism regulating e-LTP induction in the PRh, and may be associated with auditory learning., (© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.)- Published
- 2017
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33. Top-down modulation of sensory cortex gates perceptual learning.
- Author
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Caras ML and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Gerbillinae physiology, Learning physiology, Neurons physiology, Parietal Lobe, Task Performance and Analysis, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Somatosensory Cortex physiology
- Abstract
Practice sharpens our perceptual judgments, a process known as perceptual learning. Although several brain regions and neural mechanisms have been proposed to support perceptual learning, formal tests of causality are lacking. Furthermore, the temporal relationship between neural and behavioral plasticity remains uncertain. To address these issues, we recorded the activity of auditory cortical neurons as gerbils trained on a sound detection task. Training led to improvements in cortical and behavioral sensitivity that were closely matched in terms of magnitude and time course. Surprisingly, the degree of neural improvement was behaviorally gated. During task performance, cortical improvements were large and predicted behavioral outcomes. In contrast, during nontask listening sessions, cortical improvements were weak and uncorrelated with perceptual performance. Targeted reduction of auditory cortical activity during training diminished perceptual learning while leaving psychometric performance largely unaffected. Collectively, our findings suggest that training facilitates perceptual learning by strengthening both bottom-up sensory encoding and top-down modulation of auditory cortex., Competing Interests: The authors declare no conflict of interest.
- Published
- 2017
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34. Corrigendum: A viral strategy for targeting and manipulating interneurons across vertebrate species.
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Dimidschstein J, Chen Q, Tremblay R, Rogers SL, Saldi GA, Guo L, Xu Q, Liu R, Lu C, Chu J, Avery MC, Rashid MS, Baek M, Jacob AL, Smith GB, Wilson DE, Kosche G, Kruglikov I, Rusielewicz T, Kotak VC, Mowery TM, Anderson SA, Callaway EM, Dasen JS, Fitzpatrick D, Fossati V, Long MA, Noggle S, Reynolds JH, Sanes DH, Rudy B, Feng G, and Fishell G
- Published
- 2017
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35. Addendum: A viral strategy for targeting and manipulating interneurons across vertebrate species.
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Dimidschstein J, Chen Q, Tremblay R, Rogers SL, Saldi GA, Guo L, Xu Q, Liu R, Lu C, Chu J, Avery MC, Rashid MS, Baek M, Jacob AL, Smith GB, Wilson DE, Kosche G, Kruglikov I, Rusielewicz T, Kotak VC, Mowery TM, Anderson SA, Callaway EM, Dasen JS, Fitzpatrick D, Fossati V, Long MA, Noggle S, Reynolds JH, Sanes DH, Rudy B, Feng G, and Fishell G
- Published
- 2017
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36. The Sensory Striatum Is Permanently Impaired by Transient Developmental Deprivation.
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Mowery TM, Penikis KB, Young SK, Ferrer CE, Kotak VC, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Auditory Cortex cytology, Auditory Pathways, Corpus Striatum physiology, Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Sensory Deprivation physiology, Auditory Cortex growth & development
- Abstract
Corticostriatal circuits play a fundamental role in regulating many behaviors, and their dysfunction is associated with many neurological disorders. In contrast, sensory disorders, like hearing loss (HL), are commonly linked with processing deficits at or below the level of the auditory cortex (ACx). However, HL can be accompanied by non-sensory deficits, such as learning delays, suggesting the involvement of regions downstream of ACx. Here, we show that transient developmental HL differentially affected the ACx and its downstream target, the sensory striatum. Following HL, both juvenile ACx layer 5 and striatal neurons displayed an excitatory-inhibitory imbalance and lower firing rates. After hearing was restored, adult ACx neurons recovered balanced excitatory-inhibitory synaptic gain and control-like firing rates, but striatal neuron synapses and firing properties did not recover. Thus, a brief period of abnormal cortical activity may induce cellular impairments that persist into adulthood and contribute to neurological disorders that are striatal in origin., (Copyright © 2017 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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37. Developmental hearing loss impedes auditory task learning and performance in gerbils.
- Author
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von Trapp G, Aloni I, Young S, Semple MN, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Attention, Auditory Pathways physiopathology, Auditory Threshold, Cues, Discrimination, Psychological, Disease Models, Animal, Generalization, Psychological, Gerbillinae, Male, Neuronal Plasticity, Psychoacoustics, Signal Detection, Psychological, Time Factors, Auditory Perception, Behavior, Animal, Hearing, Hearing Loss, Conductive physiopathology, Hearing Loss, Conductive psychology, Learning
- Abstract
The consequences of developmental hearing loss have been reported to include both sensory and cognitive deficits. To investigate these issues in a non-human model, auditory learning and asymptotic psychometric performance were compared between normal hearing (NH) adult gerbils and those reared with conductive hearing loss (CHL). At postnatal day 10, before ear canal opening, gerbil pups underwent bilateral malleus removal to induce a permanent CHL. Both CHL and control animals were trained to approach a water spout upon presentation of a target (Go stimuli), and withhold for foils (Nogo stimuli). To assess the rate of task acquisition and asymptotic performance, animals were tested on an amplitude modulation (AM) rate discrimination task. Behavioral performance was calculated using a signal detection theory framework. Animals reared with developmental CHL displayed a slower rate of task acquisition for AM discrimination task. Slower acquisition was explained by an impaired ability to generalize to newly introduced stimuli, as compared to controls. Measurement of discrimination thresholds across consecutive testing blocks revealed that CHL animals required a greater number of testing sessions to reach asymptotic threshold values, as compared to controls. However, with sufficient training, CHL animals approached control performance. These results indicate that a sensory impediment can delay auditory learning, and increase the risk of poor performance on a temporal task., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2017
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38. A viral strategy for targeting and manipulating interneurons across vertebrate species.
- Author
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Dimidschstein J, Chen Q, Tremblay R, Rogers SL, Saldi GA, Guo L, Xu Q, Liu R, Lu C, Chu J, Grimley JS, Krostag AR, Kaykas A, Avery MC, Rashid MS, Baek M, Jacob AL, Smith GB, Wilson DE, Kosche G, Kruglikov I, Rusielewicz T, Kotak VC, Mowery TM, Anderson SA, Callaway EM, Dasen JS, Fitzpatrick D, Fossati V, Long MA, Noggle S, Reynolds JH, Sanes DH, Rudy B, Feng G, and Fishell G
- Subjects
- Animals, Behavior, Animal, Brain metabolism, Cells, Cultured, Dependovirus genetics, Female, GABAergic Neurons pathology, Genetic Vectors genetics, Mice, Inbred C57BL, Brain virology, Dependovirus isolation & purification, GABAergic Neurons virology, Interneurons physiology, Vertebrates virology
- Abstract
A fundamental impediment to understanding the brain is the availability of inexpensive and robust methods for targeting and manipulating specific neuronal populations. The need to overcome this barrier is pressing because there are considerable anatomical, physiological, cognitive and behavioral differences between mice and higher mammalian species in which it is difficult to specifically target and manipulate genetically defined functional cell types. In particular, it is unclear the degree to which insights from mouse models can shed light on the neural mechanisms that mediate cognitive functions in higher species, including humans. Here we describe a novel recombinant adeno-associated virus that restricts gene expression to GABAergic interneurons within the telencephalon. We demonstrate that the viral expression is specific and robust, allowing for morphological visualization, activity monitoring and functional manipulation of interneurons in both mice and non-genetically tractable species, thus opening the possibility to study GABAergic function in virtually any vertebrate species.
- Published
- 2016
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39. A Decline in Response Variability Improves Neural Signal Detection during Auditory Task Performance.
- Author
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von Trapp G, Buran BN, Sen K, Semple MN, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Gerbillinae, Male, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Cell Plasticity physiology, Sensory Receptor Cells physiology, Task Performance and Analysis
- Abstract
The detection of a sensory stimulus arises from a significant change in neural activity, but a sensory neuron's response is rarely identical to successive presentations of the same stimulus. Large trial-to-trial variability would limit the central nervous system's ability to reliably detect a stimulus, presumably affecting perceptual performance. However, if response variability were to decrease while firing rate remained constant, then neural sensitivity could improve. Here, we asked whether engagement in an auditory detection task can modulate response variability, thereby increasing neural sensitivity. We recorded telemetrically from the core auditory cortex of gerbils, both while they engaged in an amplitude-modulation detection task and while they sat quietly listening to the identical stimuli. Using a signal detection theory framework, we found that neural sensitivity was improved during task performance, and this improvement was closely associated with a decrease in response variability. Moreover, units with the greatest change in response variability had absolute neural thresholds most closely aligned with simultaneously measured perceptual thresholds. Our findings suggest that the limitations imposed by response variability diminish during task performance, thereby improving the sensitivity of neural encoding and potentially leading to better perceptual sensitivity., Significance Statement: The detection of a sensory stimulus arises from a significant change in neural activity. However, trial-to-trial variability of the neural response may limit perceptual performance. If the neural response to a stimulus is quite variable, then the response on a given trial could be confused with the pattern of neural activity generated when the stimulus is absent. Therefore, a neural mechanism that served to reduce response variability would allow for better stimulus detection. By recording from the cortex of freely moving animals engaged in an auditory detection task, we found that variability of the neural response becomes smaller during task performance, thereby improving neural detection thresholds., (Copyright © 2016 the authors 0270-6474/16/3611097-10$15.00/0.)
- Published
- 2016
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40. The onset of visual experience gates auditory cortex critical periods.
- Author
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Mowery TM, Kotak VC, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Female, Gerbillinae, Hearing physiology, Hearing Loss physiopathology, Humans, Male, Neuronal Plasticity physiology, Sensory Deprivation physiology, Vision, Ocular physiology, Visual Cortex physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Visual Cortex physiopathology
- Abstract
Sensory systems influence one another during development and deprivation can lead to cross-modal plasticity. As auditory function begins before vision, we investigate the effect of manipulating visual experience during auditory cortex critical periods (CPs) by assessing the influence of early, normal and delayed eyelid opening on hearing loss-induced changes to membrane and inhibitory synaptic properties. Early eyelid opening closes the auditory cortex CPs precociously and dark rearing prevents this effect. In contrast, delayed eyelid opening extends the auditory cortex CPs by several additional days. The CP for recovery from hearing loss is also closed prematurely by early eyelid opening and extended by delayed eyelid opening. Furthermore, when coupled with transient hearing loss that animals normally fully recover from, very early visual experience leads to inhibitory deficits that persist into adulthood. Finally, we demonstrate a functional projection from the visual to auditory cortex that could mediate these effects.
- Published
- 2016
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41. Developmental Conductive Hearing Loss Reduces Modulation Masking Release.
- Author
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Ihlefeld A, Chen YW, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Hearing, Humans, Noise, Auditory Threshold, Hearing Loss, Conductive, Perceptual Masking
- Abstract
Hearing-impaired individuals experience difficulties in detecting or understanding speech, especially in background sounds within the same frequency range. However, normally hearing (NH) human listeners experience less difficulty detecting a target tone in background noise when the envelope of that noise is temporally gated (modulated) than when that envelope is flat across time (unmodulated). This perceptual benefit is called modulation masking release (MMR). When flanking masker energy is added well outside the frequency band of the target, and comodulated with the original modulated masker, detection thresholds improve further (MMR+). In contrast, if the flanking masker is antimodulated with the original masker, thresholds worsen (MMR-). These interactions across disparate frequency ranges are thought to require central nervous system (CNS) processing. Therefore, we explored the effect of developmental conductive hearing loss (CHL) in gerbils on MMR characteristics, as a test for putative CNS mechanisms. The detection thresholds of NH gerbils were lower in modulated noise, when compared with unmodulated noise. The addition of a comodulated flanker further improved performance, whereas an antimodulated flanker worsened performance. However, for CHL-reared gerbils, all three forms of masking release were reduced when compared with NH animals. These results suggest that developmental CHL impairs both within- and across-frequency processing and provide behavioral evidence that CNS mechanisms are affected by a peripheral hearing impairment.
- Published
- 2016
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42. Auditory midbrain processing is differentially modulated by auditory and visual cortices: An auditory fMRI study.
- Author
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Gao PP, Zhang JW, Fan SJ, Sanes DH, and Wu EX
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Animals, Brain Mapping, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Neural Pathways physiology, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Vocalization, Animal, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Inferior Colliculi physiology, Visual Cortex physiology
- Abstract
The cortex contains extensive descending projections, yet the impact of cortical input on brainstem processing remains poorly understood. In the central auditory system, the auditory cortex contains direct and indirect pathways (via brainstem cholinergic cells) to nuclei of the auditory midbrain, called the inferior colliculus (IC). While these projections modulate auditory processing throughout the IC, single neuron recordings have samples from only a small fraction of cells during stimulation of the corticofugal pathway. Furthermore, assessments of cortical feedback have not been extended to sensory modalities other than audition. To address these issues, we devised blood-oxygen-level-dependent (BOLD) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) paradigms to measure the sound-evoked responses throughout the rat IC and investigated the effects of bilateral ablation of either auditory or visual cortices. Auditory cortex ablation increased the gain of IC responses to noise stimuli (primarily in the central nucleus of the IC) and decreased response selectivity to forward species-specific vocalizations (versus temporally reversed ones, most prominently in the external cortex of the IC). In contrast, visual cortex ablation decreased the gain and induced a much smaller effect on response selectivity. The results suggest that auditory cortical projections normally exert a large-scale and net suppressive influence on specific IC subnuclei, while visual cortical projections provide a facilitatory influence. Meanwhile, auditory cortical projections enhance the midbrain response selectivity to species-specific vocalizations. We also probed the role of the indirect cholinergic projections in the auditory system in the descending modulation process by pharmacologically blocking muscarinic cholinergic receptors. This manipulation did not affect the gain of IC responses but significantly reduced the response selectivity to vocalizations. The results imply that auditory cortical gain modulation is mediated primarily through direct projections and they point to future investigations of the differential roles of the direct and indirect projections in corticofugal modulation. In summary, our imaging findings demonstrate the large-scale descending influences, from both the auditory and visual cortices, on sound processing in different IC subdivisions. They can guide future studies on the coordinated activity across multiple regions of the auditory network, and its dysfunctions., (Copyright © 2015 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2015
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43. Characterization of auditory synaptic inputs to gerbil perirhinal cortex.
- Author
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Kotak VC, Mowery TM, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Auditory Pathways drug effects, Bicuculline analogs & derivatives, Bicuculline pharmacology, Calcium metabolism, Dextrans metabolism, Electric Stimulation, Excitatory Amino Acid Antagonists pharmacology, Excitatory Postsynaptic Potentials drug effects, GABA-A Receptor Antagonists pharmacology, Gerbillinae, In Vitro Techniques, Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials drug effects, Neurons drug effects, Patch-Clamp Techniques, Potassium Channel Blockers pharmacology, Quinoxalines pharmacology, Rhodamines metabolism, Statistics, Nonparametric, Synapses drug effects, Thalamus physiology, Auditory Cortex cytology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Pathways physiology, Neurons physiology, Synapses physiology
- Abstract
The representation of acoustic cues involves regions downstream from the auditory cortex (ACx). One such area, the perirhinal cortex (PRh), processes sensory signals containing mnemonic information. Therefore, our goal was to assess whether PRh receives auditory inputs from the auditory thalamus (MG) and ACx in an auditory thalamocortical brain slice preparation and characterize these afferent-driven synaptic properties. When the MG or ACx was electrically stimulated, synaptic responses were recorded from the PRh neurons. Blockade of type A gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA-A) receptors dramatically increased the amplitude of evoked excitatory potentials. Stimulation of the MG or ACx also evoked calcium transients in most PRh neurons. Separately, when fluoro ruby was injected in ACx in vivo, anterogradely labeled axons and terminals were observed in the PRh. Collectively, these data show that the PRh integrates auditory information from the MG and ACx and that auditory driven inhibition dominates the postsynaptic responses in a non-sensory cortical region downstream from the ACx.
- Published
- 2015
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44. Transient Hearing Loss Within a Critical Period Causes Persistent Changes to Cellular Properties in Adult Auditory Cortex.
- Author
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Mowery TM, Kotak VC, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation, Action Potentials physiology, Age of Onset, Animals, Disease Models, Animal, Ear Protective Devices, Gerbillinae, Hearing Tests, Neural Inhibition physiology, Neural Pathways physiopathology, Patch-Clamp Techniques, Recovery of Function physiology, Sensory Deprivation physiology, Thalamus growth & development, Thalamus physiopathology, Tissue Culture Techniques, Auditory Cortex growth & development, Auditory Cortex physiopathology, Hearing Loss physiopathology, Pyramidal Cells physiology
- Abstract
Sensory deprivation can induce profound changes to central processing during developmental critical periods (CPs), and the recovery of normal function is maximal if the sensory input is restored during these epochs. Therefore, we asked whether mild and transient hearing loss (HL) during discrete CPs could induce changes to cortical cellular physiology. Electrical and inhibitory synaptic properties were obtained from auditory cortex pyramidal neurons using whole-cell recordings after bilateral earplug insertion or following earplug removal. Varying the age of HL onset revealed brief CPs of vulnerability for membrane and firing properties, as well as, inhibitory synaptic currents. These CPs closed 1 week after ear canal opening on postnatal day (P) 18. To examine whether the cellular properties could recover from HL, earplugs were removed prior to (P17) or after (P23), the closure of these CPs. The earlier age of hearing restoration led to greater recovery of cellular function, but firing rate remained disrupted. When earplugs were removed after the closure of these CPs, several changes persisted into adulthood. Therefore, long-lasting cellular deficits that emerge from transient deprivation during a CP may contribute to delayed acquisition of auditory skills in children who experience temporary HL., (© The Author 2014. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2015
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45. Sustained Perceptual Deficits from Transient Sensory Deprivation.
- Author
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Caras ML and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Auditory Cortex growth & development, Female, Gerbillinae, Male, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Brain Stem physiology, Sensory Deprivation physiology
- Abstract
Sensory pathways display heightened plasticity during development, yet the perceptual consequences of early experience are generally assessed in adulthood. This approach does not allow one to identify transient perceptual changes that may be linked to the central plasticity observed in juvenile animals. Here, we determined whether a brief period of bilateral auditory deprivation affects sound perception in developing and adult gerbils. Animals were reared with bilateral earplugs, either from postnatal day 11 (P11) to postnatal day 23 (P23) (a manipulation previously found to disrupt gerbil cortical properties), or from P23-P35. Fifteen days after earplug removal and restoration of normal thresholds, animals were tested on their ability to detect the presence of amplitude modulation (AM), a temporal cue that supports vocal communication. Animals reared with earplugs from P11-P23 displayed elevated AM detection thresholds, compared with age-matched controls. In contrast, an identical period of earplug rearing at a later age (P23-P35) did not impair auditory perception. Although the AM thresholds of earplug-reared juveniles improved during a week of repeated testing, a subset of juveniles continued to display a perceptual deficit. Furthermore, although the perceptual deficits induced by transient earplug rearing had resolved for most animals by adulthood, a subset of adults displayed impaired performance. Control experiments indicated that earplugging did not disrupt the integrity of the auditory periphery. Together, our results suggest that P11-P23 encompasses a critical period during which sensory deprivation disrupts central mechanisms that support auditory perceptual skills., Significance Statement: Sensory systems are particularly malleable during development. This heightened degree of plasticity is beneficial because it enables the acquisition of complex skills, such as music or language. However, this plasticity comes with a cost: nervous system development displays an increased vulnerability to the sensory environment. Here, we identify a precise developmental window during which mild hearing loss affects the maturation of an auditory perceptual cue that is known to support animal communication, including human speech. Furthermore, animals reared with transient hearing loss display deficits in perceptual learning. Our results suggest that speech and language delays associated with transient or permanent childhood hearing loss may be accounted for, in part, by deficits in central auditory processing mechanisms., (Copyright © 2015 the authors 0270-6474/15/3510831-12$15.00/0.)
- Published
- 2015
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46. Cortical Synaptic Inhibition Declines during Auditory Learning.
- Author
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Sarro EC, von Trapp G, Mowery TM, Kotak VC, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Animals, Auditory Perception physiology, Conditioning, Classical physiology, Gerbillinae, Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials physiology, Male, Pyramidal Cells physiology, Synaptic Transmission physiology, Association Learning physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Neural Inhibition physiology
- Abstract
Auditory learning is associated with an enhanced representation of acoustic cues in primary auditory cortex, and modulation of inhibitory strength is causally involved in learning. If this inhibitory plasticity is associated with task learning and improvement, its expression should emerge and persist until task proficiency is achieved. We tested this idea by measuring changes to cortical inhibitory synaptic transmission as adult gerbils progressed through the process of associative learning and perceptual improvement. Using either of two procedures, aversive or appetitive conditioning, animals were trained to detect amplitude-modulated noise and then tested daily. Following each training session, a thalamocortical brain slice was generated, and inhibitory synaptic properties were recorded from layer 2/3 pyramidal neurons. Initial associative learning was accompanied by a profound reduction in the amplitude of spontaneous IPSCs (sIPSCs). However, sIPSC amplitude returned to control levels when animals reached asymptotic behavioral performance. In contrast, paired-pulse ratios decreased in trained animals as well as in control animals that experienced unpaired conditioned and unconditioned stimuli. This latter observation suggests that inhibitory release properties are modified during behavioral conditioning, even when an association between the sound and reinforcement cannot occur. These results suggest that associative learning is accompanied by a reduction of postsynaptic inhibitory strength that persists for several days during learning and perceptual improvement., (Copyright © 2015 the authors 0270-6474/15/356318-08$15.00/0.)
- Published
- 2015
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47. On the localization of complex sounds: temporal encoding based on input-slope coincidence detection of envelopes.
- Author
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Gai Y, Kotak VC, Sanes DH, and Rinzel J
- Subjects
- Animals, Cochlear Nerve physiology, Gerbillinae, Humans, Neurons physiology, Speech Perception, Superior Olivary Complex cytology, Superior Olivary Complex physiology, Evoked Potentials, Auditory, Models, Neurological, Sound Localization
- Abstract
Behavioral and neural findings demonstrate that animals can locate low-frequency sounds along the azimuth by detecting microsecond interaural time differences (ITDs). Information about ITDs is also available in the amplitude modulations (i.e., envelope) of high-frequency sounds. Since medial superior olivary (MSO) neurons encode low-frequency ITDs, we asked whether they employ a similar mechanism to process envelope ITDs with high-frequency carriers, and the effectiveness of this mechanism compared with the process of low-frequency sound. We developed a novel hybrid in vitro dynamic-clamp approach, which enabled us to mimic synaptic input to brain-slice neurons in response to virtual sound and to create conditions that cannot be achieved naturally but are useful for testing our hypotheses. For each simulated ear, a virtual sound, computer generated, was used as input to a computational auditory-nerve model. Model spike times were converted into synaptic input for MSO neurons, and ITD tuning curves were derived for several virtual-sound conditions: low-frequency pure tones, high-frequency tones modulated with two types of envelope, and speech sequences. Computational models were used to verify the physiological findings and explain the biophysical mechanism underlying the observed ITD coding. Both recordings and simulations indicate that MSO neurons are sensitive to ITDs carried by spectrotemporally complex virtual sounds, including speech tokens. Our findings strongly suggest that MSO neurons can encode ITDs across a broad-frequency spectrum using an input-slope-based coincidence-detection mechanism. Our data also provide an explanation at the cellular level for human localization performance involving high-frequency sound described by previous investigators., (Copyright © 2014 the American Physiological Society.)
- Published
- 2014
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48. Developmental expression of inhibitory synaptic long-term potentiation in the lateral superior olive.
- Author
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Kotak VC and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Age Factors, Animals, Auditory Pathways growth & development, Gerbillinae, Olivary Nucleus growth & development, Patch-Clamp Techniques, Synapses physiology, Auditory Pathways physiology, Inhibitory Postsynaptic Potentials physiology, Long-Term Potentiation physiology, Neurons physiology, Olivary Nucleus physiology
- Abstract
Principal neurons of the lateral superior olivary nucleus (LSO) respond selectively to interaural level differences (ILD). To perform this computation, LSO neurons integrate excitatory synaptic drive from the ipsilateral ear with inhibitory synaptic drive from the contralateral ear via the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body (MNTB). Previous research demonstrated that inhibitory terminals from the MNTB to the LSO are eliminated during development. Furthermore, MNTB synapses display an activity- and age-dependent long-term depression (iLTD) that may contribute to inhibitory synapse elimination. However, inhibitory synapses that are stabilized become stronger. Here, we asked whether MNTB synapses displayed activity-dependent strengthening. Whole-cell recordings were obtained from LSO neurons in a gerbil brain slice before and after hearing onset. The inhibitory MNTB afferents were stimulated at a low rate, similar to spontaneous discharge rates observed in vivo. The MNTB-evoked inhibitory responses were strengthened by 40-300% when synaptic activity was coupled with postsynaptic membrane depolarization, exogenous glutamate application, or activation of ipsilateral excitatory synaptic inputs. This inhibitory long-term potentiation (iLTP) was associated with increased spontaneous inhibitory postsynaptic current (IPSC) amplitude and frequency. One hour after iLTP induction, IPSCs could not be de-potentiated by the MNTB stimulation pattern that induces iLTD in control slices. iLTP could only be induced after hearing onset (>P12), and was blocked in the presence of a GABAB receptor antagonist. Together, these results suggest a developmental period during which the induction of iLTP depends on the conjoint activation of GABAB receptors and postsynaptic depolarization. We propose that iLTP may support stabilization of un-pruned MNTB connections and contribute to the emergence of ILD processing in the mature LSO.
- Published
- 2014
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49. Auditory training during development mitigates a hearing loss-induced perceptual deficit.
- Author
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Kang R, Sarro EC, and Sanes DH
- Abstract
Sensory experience during early development can shape the central nervous system and this is thought to influence adult perceptual skills. In the auditory system, early induction of conductive hearing loss (CHL) leads to deficits in central auditory coding properties in adult animals, and this is accompanied by diminished perceptual thresholds. In contrast, a brief regimen of auditory training during development can enhance the perceptual skills of animals when tested in adulthood. Here, we asked whether a brief period of training during development could compensate for the perceptual deficits displayed by adult animals reared with CHL. Juvenile gerbils with CHL, and age-matched controls, were trained on a frequency modulation (FM) detection task for 4 or 10 days. The performance of each group was subsequently assessed in adulthood, and compared to adults with normal hearing (NH) or adults raised with CHL that did not receive juvenile training. We show that as juveniles, both CHL and NH animals display similar FM detection thresholds that are not immediately impacted by the perceptual training. However, as adults, detection thresholds and psychometric function slopes of these animals were significantly improved. Importantly, CHL adults with juvenile training displayed thresholds that approached NH adults. Additionally, we found that hearing impaired animals trained for 10 days displayed adult thresholds closer to untrained adults than those trained for 4 days. Thus, a relatively brief period of auditory training may compensate for the deleterious impact of hearing deprivation on auditory perception on the trained task.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Behaviorally gated reduction of spontaneous discharge can improve detection thresholds in auditory cortex.
- Author
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Buran BN, von Trapp G, and Sanes DH
- Subjects
- Acoustic Stimulation methods, Animals, Auditory Cortex cytology, Behavior, Animal physiology, Conditioning, Psychological physiology, Environment Design, Gerbillinae, Neurons physiology, Signal-To-Noise Ratio, Attention physiology, Auditory Cortex physiology, Auditory Perception physiology, Auditory Threshold physiology, Sensory Gating physiology
- Abstract
Animals often listen selectively for particular sounds, a strategy that could alter neural encoding mechanisms to maximize the ability to detect the target. Here, we recorded auditory cortex neuron responses in well trained, freely moving gerbils as they performed a tone detection task. Each trial was initiated by the animal, providing a predictable time window during which to listen. No sound was presented on nogo trials, permitting us to assess spontaneous activity on trials in which a signal could have been expected, but was not delivered. Immediately after animals initiated a trial, auditory cortex neurons displayed a 26% reduction in spontaneous activity. Moreover, when stimulus-driven discharge rate was referenced to this reduced baseline, a larger fraction of auditory cortex neurons displayed a detection threshold within 10 dB of the behavioral threshold. These findings suggest that auditory cortex spontaneous discharge rate can be modulated transiently during task performance, thereby increasing the signal-to-noise ratio and enhancing signal detection.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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