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Neural Coding Auditory Cortex

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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Neural coding in the auditory cortex - "Emergent Scientists Seminar Series

Dr Jennifer Lawlor & Mr Aleksandar Ivanov

Johns Hopkins University / University of Oxford

Schedule
Friday, July 17, 2020

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Schedule

Friday, July 17, 2020

4:00 PM Europe/London

Host: Cortex Club

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Past Seminar

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Cortex Club

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70.00 minutes

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Abstract

Dr Jennifer Lawlor Title: Tracking changes in complex auditory scenes along the cortical pathway Complex acoustic environments, such as a busy street, are characterised by their everchanging dynamics. Despite their complexity, listeners can readily tease apart relevant changes from irrelevant variations. This requires continuously tracking the appropriate sensory evidence while discarding noisy acoustic variations. Despite the apparent simplicity of this perceptual phenomenon, the neural basis of the extraction of relevant information in complex continuous streams for goal-directed behavior is currently not well understood. As a minimalistic model for change detection in complex auditory environments, we designed broad-range tone clouds whose first-order statistics change at a random time. Subjects (humans or ferrets) were trained to detect these changes.They were faced with the dual-task of estimating the baseline statistics and detecting a potential change in those statistics at any moment. To characterize the extraction and encoding of relevant sensory information along the cortical hierarchy, we first recorded the brain electrical activity of human subjects engaged in this task using electroencephalography. Human performance and reaction times improved with longer pre-change exposure, consistent with improved estimation of baseline statistics. Change-locked and decision-related EEG responses were found in a centro-parietal scalp location, whose slope depended on change size, consistent with sensory evidence accumulation. To further this investigation, we performed a series of electrophysiological recordings in the primary auditory cortex (A1), secondary auditory cortex (PEG) and frontal cortex (FC) of the fully trained behaving ferret. A1 neurons exhibited strong onset responses and change-related discharges specific to neuronal tuning. PEG population showed reduced onset-related responses, but more categorical change-related modulations. Finally, a subset of FC neurons (dlPFC/premotor) presented a generalized response to all change-related events only during behavior. We show using a Generalized Linear Model (GLM) that the same subpopulation in FC encodes sensory and decision signals, suggesting that FC neurons could operate conversion of sensory evidence to perceptual decision. All together, these area-specific responses suggest a behavior-dependent mechanism of sensory extraction and generalization of task-relevant event. Aleksandar Ivanov Title: How does the auditory system adapt to different environments: A song of echoes and adaptation

Topics

Generalized Linear Modelauditory cortexauditory neurosciencechange detectioncortexdecision-related responseselectroencephalographyneural codingneuronal tuningsensory evidencesensory extractionsensory neuroscience

About the Speaker

Dr Jennifer Lawlor & Mr Aleksandar Ivanov

Johns Hopkins University / University of Oxford

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

www.kishorelab.org/team%20&%20https://www.dpag.ox.ac.uk/team/aleksandar-ivanov

@phant0msp1k3

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twitter.com/phant0msp1k3

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