Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 20 de 35
Filtrar
1.
Nature ; 546(7657): 297-301, 2017 06 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28562592

RESUMEN

Adult pair bonding involves dramatic changes in the perception and valuation of another individual. One key change is that partners come to reliably activate the brain's reward system, although the precise neural mechanisms by which partners become rewarding during sociosexual interactions leading to a bond remain unclear. Here we show, using a prairie vole (Microtus ochrogaster) model of social bonding, how a functional circuit from the medial prefrontal cortex to nucleus accumbens is dynamically modulated to enhance females' affiliative behaviour towards a partner. Individual variation in the strength of this functional connectivity, particularly after the first mating encounter, predicts how quickly animals begin affiliative huddling with their partner. Rhythmically activating this circuit in a social context without mating biases later preference towards a partner, indicating that this circuit's activity is not just correlated with how quickly animals become affiliative but causally accelerates it. These results provide the first dynamic view of corticostriatal activity during bond formation, revealing how social interactions can recruit brain reward systems to drive changes in affiliative behaviour.


Asunto(s)
Arvicolinae/fisiología , Arvicolinae/psicología , Núcleo Accumbens/fisiología , Apareamiento , Corteza Prefrontal/fisiología , Recompensa , Conducta Social , Animales , Femenino , Masculino , Preferencia en el Apareamiento Animal/fisiología , Núcleo Accumbens/citología , Corteza Prefrontal/citología , Factores de Tiempo
2.
Neural Plast ; 2023: 5225952, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36845359

RESUMEN

While infant cues are often assumed to innately motivate maternal response, recent research highlights how the neural coding of infant cues is altered through maternal care. Infant vocalizations are important social signals for caregivers, and evidence from mice suggests that experience caring for mouse pups induces inhibitory plasticity in the auditory cortex (AC), though the molecular mediators for such AC plasticity during the initial pup experience are not well delineated. Here, we used the maternal mouse communication model to explore whether transcription in AC of a specific, inhibition-linked, memory-associated gene, brain-derived neurotrophic factor (Bdnf) changes due to the very first pup caring experience hearing vocalizations, while controlling for the systemic influence of the hormone estrogen. Ovariectomized and estradiol or blank-implanted virgin female mice hearing pup calls with pups present had significantly higher AC exon IV Bdnf mRNA compared to females without pups present, suggesting that the social context of vocalizations induces immediate molecular changes at the site of auditory cortical processing. E2 influenced the rate of maternal behavior but did not significantly affect Bdnf mRNA transcription in the AC. To our knowledge, this is the first time Bdnf has been associated with processing social vocalizations in the AC, and our results suggest that it is a potential molecular component responsible for enhancing future recognition of infant cues by contributing to AC plasticity.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva , Animales , Femenino , Ratones , Humanos , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Animales Recién Nacidos , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Factor Neurotrófico Derivado del Encéfalo/genética , Estimulación Acústica/métodos , Audición , Conducta Materna/fisiología , ARN Mensajero
3.
J Neurosci ; 40(23): 4469-4482, 2020 06 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32327533

RESUMEN

Time-dependent frequency trajectories are an inherent feature of many behaviorally relevant sounds, such as species-specific vocalizations. Dynamic frequency trajectories, even in short sounds, often convey meaningful information, which may be used to differentiate sound categories. However, it is not clear what and where neural responses in the auditory cortical pathway are critical for conveying information about behaviorally relevant frequency trajectories, and how these responses change with experience. Here, we uncover tuning to subtle variations in frequency trajectories in auditory cortex of female mice. We found that auditory cortical responses could be modulated by variations in a pure tone trajectory as small as 1/24th of an octave, comparable to what has been reported in primates. In particular, late spiking after the end of a sound stimulus was more often sensitive to the sound's subtle frequency variation compared with spiking during the sound. Such "Off" responses in the adult A2, but not those in core auditory cortex, were plastic in a way that may enhance the representation of a newly acquired, behaviorally relevant sound category. We illustrate this with the maternal mouse paradigm for natural vocalization learning. By using an ethologically inspired paradigm to drive auditory responses in higher-order neurons, our results demonstrate that mouse auditory cortex can track fine frequency changes, which allows A2 Off responses in particular to better respond to pitch trajectories that distinguish behaviorally relevant, natural sound categories.SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT A whistle's pitch conveys meaning to its listener, as when dogs learn that distinct pitch trajectories whistled by their owner differentiate specific commands. Many species use pitch trajectories in their own vocalizations to distinguish sound categories, such as in human languages, such as Mandarin. How and where auditory neural activity encodes these pitch trajectories as their meaning is learned but not well understood, especially for short-duration sounds. We studied this in mice, where infants use ultrasonic whistles to communicate to adults. We found that late neural firing after a sound ends can be tuned to how the pitch changes in time, and that this response in a secondary auditory cortical field changes with experience to acquire a pitch change's meaning.


Asunto(s)
Estimulación Acústica/métodos , Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Percepción de la Altura Tonal/fisiología , Tiempo de Reacción/fisiología , Factores de Edad , Animales , Electrodos Implantados , Femenino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Distribución Aleatoria
4.
Horm Behav ; 124: 104779, 2020 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32502487

RESUMEN

While mothering is often instinctive and stereotyped in species-specific ways, evolution can favor genetically "open" behavior programs that allow experience to shape infant care. Among experience-dependent maternal behavioral mechanisms, sensory learning about infants has been hard to separate from motivational changes arising from sensitization with infants. We developed a paradigm in which sensory learning of an infant-associated cue improves a stereotypical maternal behavior in female mice. Mice instinctively employed a spatial memory-based strategy when engaged repetitively in a pup search and retrieval task. However, by playing a sound from a T-maze arm to signal where a pup will be delivered for retrieval, mice learned within 7 days and retained for at least 2 weeks the ability to use this specific cue to guide a more efficient search strategy. The motivation to retrieve pups also increased with learning on average, but their correlation did not explain performance at the trial level. Bilaterally silencing auditory cortical activity significantly impaired the utilization of new strategy without changing the motivation to retrieve pups. Finally, motherhood as compared to infant-care experience alone accelerated how quickly the new sensory-based strategy was acquired, suggesting a role for the maternal hormonal state. By rigorously establishing that newly formed sensory associations can improve the performance of a natural maternal behavior, this work facilitates future studies into the neurochemical and circuit mechanisms that mediate novel sensory learning in the maternal context, as well as more learning-based mechanisms of parental behavior in rodents.


Asunto(s)
Aprendizaje/fisiología , Conducta Materna/fisiología , Conducta Estereotipada/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Conducta Animal/fisiología , Condicionamiento Operante/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Aprendizaje por Laberinto , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Motivación , Plasticidad Neuronal/fisiología , Conducta Social , Localización de Sonidos/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología
5.
Learn Mem ; 24(12): 612-621, 2017 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29142056

RESUMEN

Learning to recognize a stimulus category requires experience with its many natural variations. However, the mechanisms that allow a category's sensorineural representation to be updated after experiencing new exemplars are not well understood, particularly at the molecular level. Here we investigate how a natural vocal category induces expression in the auditory system of a key synaptic plasticity effector immediate early gene, Arc/Arg3.1, which is required for memory consolidation. We use the ultrasonic communication system between mouse pups and adult females to study whether prior familiarity with pup vocalizations alters how Arc is engaged in the core auditory cortex after playback of novel exemplars from the pup vocal category. A computerized, 3D surface-assisted cellular compartmental analysis, validated against manual cell counts, demonstrates significant changes in the recruitment of neurons expressing Arc in pup-experienced animals (mothers and virgin females "cocaring" for pups) compared with pup-inexperienced animals (pup-naïve virgins), especially when listening to more familiar, natural calls compared to less familiar but similarly recognized tonal model calls. Our data support the hypothesis that the kinetics of Arc induction to refine cortical representations of sensory categories is sensitive to the familiarity of the sensory experience.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva/metabolismo , Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Proteínas del Citoesqueleto/metabolismo , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/metabolismo , Reconocimiento en Psicología/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Análisis de Varianza , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Corteza Auditiva/citología , Proteínas del Citoesqueleto/genética , Femenino , Regulación del Desarrollo de la Expresión Génica/fisiología , Masculino , Ratones , Proteínas del Tejido Nervioso/genética , Neuronas/clasificación , Neuronas/metabolismo , ARN Mensajero/metabolismo , Factores de Tiempo , Ondas Ultrasónicas
6.
J Neurosci ; 35(6): 2432-7, 2015 Feb 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25673838

RESUMEN

Critical periods are developmental windows during which the stimuli an animal encounters can reshape response properties in the affected system to a profound degree. Despite this window's importance, the neural mechanisms that regulate it are not completely understood. Pioneering studies in visual cortex initially indicated that norepinephrine (NE) permits ocular dominance column plasticity during the critical period, but later research has suggested otherwise. More recent work implicating NE in experience-dependent plasticity in the adult auditory cortex led us to re-examine the role of NE in critical period plasticity. Here, we exposed dopamine ß-hydroxylase knock-out (Dbh(-/-)) mice, which lack NE completely from birth, to a biased acoustic environment during the auditory cortical critical period. This manipulation led to a redistribution of best frequencies (BFs) across auditory cortex in our control mice, consistent with prior work. By contrast, Dbh(-/-) mice failed to exhibit the expected redistribution of BFs, even though NE-deficient and NE-competent mice showed comparable auditory cortical organization when reared in a quiet colony environment. These data suggest that while intrinsic tonotopic patterning of auditory cortical circuitry occurs independently from NE, NE is required for critical period plasticity in auditory cortex.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva/crecimiento & desarrollo , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Plasticidad Neuronal/fisiología , Norepinefrina/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Umbral Auditivo/fisiología , Mapeo Encefálico , Período Crítico Psicológico , Dopamina beta-Hidroxilasa/genética , Dopamina beta-Hidroxilasa/metabolismo , Potenciales Evocados Auditivos del Tronco Encefálico/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos C57BL , Ratones Noqueados , Percepción de la Altura Tonal/fisiología
7.
J Neurosci ; 35(6): 2636-45, 2015 Feb 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25673855

RESUMEN

Sound categorization is essential for auditory behaviors like acoustic communication, but its genesis within the auditory pathway is not well understood-especially for learned natural categories like vocalizations, which often share overlapping acoustic features that must be distinguished (e.g., speech). We use electrophysiological mapping and single-unit recordings in mice to investigate how representations of natural vocal categories within core auditory cortex are modulated when one category acquires enhanced behavioral relevance. Taking advantage of a maternal mouse model of acoustic communication, we found no long-term auditory cortical map expansion to represent a behaviorally relevant pup vocalization category-contrary to expectations from the cortical plasticity literature on conditioning with pure tones. Instead, we observed plasticity that improved the separation between acoustically similar pup and adult vocalization categories among a physiologically defined subset of late-onset, putative pyramidal neurons, but not among putative interneurons. Additionally, a larger proportion of these putative pyramidal neurons in maternal animals compared with nonmaternal animals responded to the individual pup call exemplars having combinations of acoustic features most typical of that category. Together, these data suggest that higher-order representations of acoustic categories arise from a subset of core auditory cortical pyramidal neurons that become biased toward the combination of acoustic features statistically predictive of membership to a behaviorally relevant sound category.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Conducta Animal/fisiología , Células Piramidales/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Corteza Auditiva/citología , Femenino , Audición/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Plasticidad Neuronal/fisiología , Relación Señal-Ruido , Ultrasonido
9.
Front Neuroendocrinol ; 34(4): 300-14, 2013 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23916405

RESUMEN

Much of the literature on maternal behavior has focused on the role of infant experience and hormones in a canonical subcortical circuit for maternal motivation and maternal memory. Although early studies demonstrated that the cerebral cortex also plays a significant role in maternal behaviors, little has been done to explore what that role may be. Recent work though has provided evidence that the cortex, particularly sensory cortices, contains correlates of sensory memories of infant cues, consistent with classical studies of experience-dependent sensory cortical plasticity in non-maternal paradigms. By reviewing the literature from both the maternal behavior and sensory cortical plasticity fields, focusing on the auditory modality, we hypothesize that maternal hormones (predominantly estrogen) may act to prime auditory cortical neurons for a longer-lasting neural trace of infant vocal cues, thereby facilitating recognition and discrimination. This couldthen more efficiently activate the subcortical circuit to elicit and sustain maternal behavior.


Asunto(s)
Estrógenos/metabolismo , Aprendizaje/fisiología , Memoria/fisiología , Relaciones Madre-Hijo , Plasticidad Neuronal/fisiología , Animales , Señales (Psicología) , Humanos , Lactante
10.
bioRxiv ; 2023 Sep 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37745495

RESUMEN

In ethological behaviors like parenting, animals innately follow stereotyped patterns of choices to decide between uncertain outcomes but can learn to modify their strategies to incorporate new information. For example, female mice in a T-maze instinctively use spatial-memory to search for pups where they last found them but can learn more efficient strategies employing pup-associated acoustic cues. We uncovered neural correlates for transitioning between these innate and learned strategies. Auditory cortex (ACx) was required during learning. ACx firing at the nest increased with learning and correlated with subsequent search speed but not outcome. Surprisingly, ACx suppression rather than facilitation during search was more prognostic of correct sound-cued outcomes - even before adopting a sound-cued strategy. Meanwhile medial prefrontal cortex encoded the last pup location, but this decayed as the spatial-memory strategy declined. Our results suggest a neural competition between a weakening spatial-memory and strengthening sound-cued neural representation to mediate strategy switches.

11.
PNAS Nexus ; 2(4): pgad085, 2023 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37113978

RESUMEN

Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) are a widespread and growing public health challenge, affecting as many as 17% of children in the United States. Recent epidemiological studies have implicated ambient exposure to pyrethroid pesticides during pregnancy in the risk for NDDs in the unborn child. Using a litter-based, independent discovery-replication cohort design, we exposed mouse dams orally during pregnancy and lactation to the Environmental Protection Agency's reference pyrethroid, deltamethrin, at 3 mg/kg, a concentration well below the benchmark dose used for regulatory guidance. The resulting offspring were tested using behavioral and molecular methods targeting behavioral phenotypes relevant to autism and NDD, as well as changes to the striatal dopamine system. Low-dose developmental exposure to the pyrethroid deltamethrin (DPE) decreased pup vocalizations, increased repetitive behaviors, and impaired both fear conditioning and operant conditioning. Compared with control mice, DPE mice had greater total striatal dopamine, dopamine metabolites, and stimulated dopamine release, but no difference in vesicular dopamine capacity or protein markers of dopamine vesicles. Dopamine transporter protein levels were increased in DPE mice, but not temporal dopamine reuptake. Striatal medium spiny neurons showed changes in electrophysiological properties consistent with a compensatory decrease in neuronal excitability. Combined with previous findings, these results implicate DPE as a direct cause of an NDD-relevant behavioral phenotype and striatal dopamine dysfunction in mice and implicate the cytosolic compartment as the location of excess striatal dopamine.

12.
Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci ; 377(1858): 20210057, 2022 08 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35858094

RESUMEN

Oxytocin modulates social behaviour across diverse vertebrate taxa, but the precise nature of its effects varies across species, individuals and lifetimes. Contributing to this variation is the fact that oxytocin's physiological effects are mediated through interaction with diverse neuromodulatory systems and can depend on the specifics of the local circuits it acts on. Furthermore, those effects can be influenced by both genetics and experience. Here we discuss this complexity through the lens of a specific neuromodulatory system, endocannabinoids, interacting with oxytocin in the nucleus accumbens to modulate prosocial behaviours in prairie voles. We provide a survey of current knowledge of oxytocin-endocannabinoid interactions in relation to social behaviour. We review in detail recent research in monogamous female prairie voles demonstrating that social experience, such as mating and pair bonding, can change how oxytocin modulates nucleus accumbens glutamatergic signalling through the recruitment of endocannabinoids to modulate prosocial behaviour toward the partner. We then discuss potential sex differences in experience-dependent modulation of the nucleus accumbens by oxytocin in voles based on new data in males. Finally, we propose that future oxytocin-based precision medicine therapies should consider how prior social experience interacts with sex and genetics to influence oxytocin actions. This article is part of the theme issue 'Interplays between oxytocin and other neuromodulators in shaping complex social behaviours'.


Asunto(s)
Oxitocina , Apareamiento , Animales , Arvicolinae/metabolismo , Endocannabinoides , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Núcleo Accumbens/metabolismo , Receptores de Oxitocina/metabolismo , Conducta Social
13.
Front Comput Neurosci ; 16: 974264, 2022.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36148326

RESUMEN

In studying how neural populations in sensory cortex code dynamically varying stimuli to guide behavior, the role of spiking after stimuli have ended has been underappreciated. This is despite growing evidence that such activity can be tuned, experience-and context-dependent and necessary for sensory decisions that play out on a slower timescale. Here we review recent studies, focusing on the auditory modality, demonstrating that this so-called OFF activity can have a more complex temporal structure than the purely phasic firing that has often been interpreted as just marking the end of stimuli. While diverse and still incompletely understood mechanisms are likely involved in generating phasic and tonic OFF firing, more studies point to the continuing post-stimulus activity serving a short-term, stimulus-specific mnemonic function that is enhanced when the stimuli are particularly salient. We summarize these results with a conceptual model highlighting how more neurons within the auditory cortical population fire for longer duration after a sound's termination during an active behavior and can continue to do so even while passively listening to behaviorally salient stimuli. Overall, these studies increasingly suggest that tonic auditory cortical OFF activity holds an echoic memory of specific, salient sounds to guide behavioral decisions.

14.
Curr Biol ; 32(5): 1026-1037.e4, 2022 03 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35108521

RESUMEN

Social relationships are dynamic and evolve with shared and personal experiences. Whether the functional role of social neuromodulators also evolves with experience to shape the trajectory of relationships is unknown. We utilized pair bonding in the socially monogamous prairie vole as an example of socio-sexual experience that dramatically alters behaviors displayed toward other individuals. We investigated oxytocin-dependent modulation of excitatory synaptic transmission in the nucleus accumbens as a function of pair-bonding status. We found that an oxytocin receptor agonist decreases the amplitude of spontaneous excitatory postsynaptic currents (sEPSCs) in sexually naive virgin, but not pair-bonded, female voles, while it increases the amplitude of electrically evoked EPSCs in paired voles, but not in virgins. This oxytocin-induced potentiation of synaptic transmission relies on the de novo coupling between oxytocin receptor signaling and endocannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1) receptor signaling in pair-bonded voles. Blocking CB1 receptors after pair-bond formation increases the occurrence of a specific form of social rejection-defensive upright response-that is displayed toward the partner, but not toward a novel individual. Altogether, our results demonstrate that oxytocin's action in the nucleus accumbens is changed through social experience in a way that regulates the trajectory of social interactions as the relationship with the partner unfolds, potentially promoting the maintenance of a pair bond by inhibiting aggressive responses. These results provide a mechanism by which social experience and context shift oxytocinergic signaling to impact neural and behavioral responses to social cues.


Asunto(s)
Núcleo Accumbens , Receptores de Oxitocina , Animales , Arvicolinae/metabolismo , Femenino , Pradera , Humanos , Núcleo Accumbens/metabolismo , Oxitocina/farmacología , Apareamiento , Receptores de Oxitocina/metabolismo , Conducta Social
15.
Front Behav Neurosci ; 15: 814200, 2021.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35087387

RESUMEN

Impairments in social communication are common among neurodevelopmental disorders. While traditional animal models have advanced our understanding of the physiological and pathological development of social behavior, they do not recapitulate some aspects where social communication is essential, such as biparental care and the ability to form long-lasting social bonds. Prairie voles (Microtus ochrogaster) have emerged as a valuable rodent model in social neuroscience because they naturally display these behaviors. Nonetheless, the role of vocalizations in prairie vole social communication remains unclear. Here, we studied the ontogeny [from postnatal days (P) 8-16] of prairie vole pup ultrasonic vocalizations (USVs), both when isolated and when the mother was present but physically unattainable. In contrast to other similarly sized rodents such as mice, prairie vole pups of all ages produced isolation USVs with a relatively low fundamental frequency between 22 and 50 kHz, often with strong harmonic structure. Males consistently emitted vocalizations with a lower frequency than females. With age, pups vocalized less, and the acoustic features of vocalizations (e.g., duration and bandwidth) became more stereotyped. Manipulating an isolated pup's social environment by introducing its mother significantly increased vocal production at older (P12-16) but not younger ages, when pups were likely unable to hear or see her. Our data provide the first indication of a maturation in social context-dependent vocal emission, which may facilitate more active acoustic communication. These results help lay a foundation for the use of prairie voles as a model organism to probe the role of early life experience in the development of social-vocal communication.

16.
J Neurophysiol ; 104(6): 3588-99, 2010 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20943946

RESUMEN

An important question in auditory neuroscience concerns how the neural representation of sound features changes from the periphery to the cortex. Here we focused on the encoding of sound onsets and we used a modeling approach to explore the degree to which auditory cortical neurons follow a similar envelope integration mechanism found at the auditory periphery. Our "forward" model was able to predict relatively accurately the timing of first spikes evoked by natural communication calls in the auditory cortex of awake, head-restrained mice, but only for a subset of cortical neurons. These neurons were systematically different in their encoding of the calls, exhibiting less call selectivity, shorter latency, greater precision, and more transient spiking compared with the same factors of their poorly predicted counterparts. Importantly, neurons that fell into this best-predicted group all had thin spike waveforms, suggestive of suspected interneurons conveying feedforward inhibition. Indeed, our population of call-excited thin spike neurons had significantly higher spontaneous rates and larger frequency tuning bandwidths than those of thick spike neurons. Thus the fidelity of our model's first spike predictions segregated neurons into one earlier responding subset, potentially dominated by suspected interneurons, which preserved a peripheral mechanism for encoding sound onsets and another longer latency subset that reflected higher, likely centrally constructed nonlinearities. These results therefore provide support for the hypothesis that physiologically distinct subclasses of neurons in the auditory cortex may contribute hierarchically to the representation of natural stimuli.


Asunto(s)
Estimulación Acústica , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Neuronas/clasificación , Potenciales de Acción/fisiología , Animales , Corteza Auditiva/citología , Electrodos Implantados , Femenino , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Microelectrodos , Modelos Neurológicos , Neuronas/fisiología , Psicoacústica , Vocalización Animal
17.
J Comput Neurosci ; 29(3): 581-97, 2010 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20143142

RESUMEN

The rapidly increasing use of the local field potential (LFP) has motivated research to better understand its relation to the gold standard of neural activity, single unit (SU) spiking. We addressed this in an in vivo, awake, restrained mouse auditory cortical electrophysiology preparation by asking whether the LFP could actually be used to predict stimulus-evoked SU spiking. Implementing a Bayesian algorithm to predict the likelihood of spiking on a trial by trial basis from different representations of the despiked LFP signal, we were able to predict, with high quality and fine temporal resolution (2 ms), the time course of a SU's excitatory or inhibitory firing rate response to natural species-specific vocalizations. Our best predictions were achieved by representing the LFP by its wide-band Hilbert phase signal, and approximating the statistical structure of this signal at different time points as independent. Our results show that each SU's action potential has a unique relationship with the LFP that can be reliably used to predict the occurrence of spikes. This "signature" interaction can reflect both pre- and post-spike neural activity that is intrinsic to the local circuit rather than just dictated by the stimulus. Finally, the time course of this "signature" may be most faithful when the full bandwidth of the LFP, rather than specific narrow-band components, is used for representation.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Potenciales Evocados Auditivos/fisiología , Neuronas/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Algoritmos , Animales , Corteza Auditiva/citología , Teorema de Bayes , Ritmo beta , Interpretación Estadística de Datos , Electroencefalografía , Espacio Extracelular/fisiología , Femenino , Funciones de Verosimilitud , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Probabilidad , Ritmo Teta
18.
PLoS Biol ; 5(7): e173, 2007 Jul.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17564499

RESUMEN

Plasticity studies suggest that behavioral relevance can change the cortical processing of trained or conditioned sensory stimuli. However, whether this occurs in the context of natural communication, where stimulus significance is acquired through social interaction, has not been well investigated, perhaps because neural responses to species-specific vocalizations can be difficult to interpret within a systematic framework. The ultrasonic communication system between isolated mouse pups and adult females that either do or do not recognize the calls' significance provides an opportunity to explore this issue. We applied an information-based analysis to multi- and single unit data collected from anesthetized mothers and pup-naïve females to quantify how the communicative significance of pup calls affects their encoding in the auditory cortex. The timing and magnitude of information that cortical responses convey (at a 2-ms resolution) for pup call detection and discrimination was significantly improved in mothers compared to naïve females, most likely because of changes in call frequency encoding. This was not the case for a non-natural sound ensemble outside the mouse vocalization repertoire. The results demonstrate that a sensory cortical change in the timing code for communication sounds is correlated with the vocalizations' behavioral relevance, potentially enhancing functional processing by improving its signal to noise ratio.


Asunto(s)
Comunicación Animal , Corteza Auditiva/fisiología , Vocalización Animal/fisiología , Estimulación Acústica , Animales , Animales Recién Nacidos , Percepción Auditiva/fisiología , Discriminación en Psicología/fisiología , Potenciales Evocados Auditivos , Femenino , Conducta Materna/fisiología , Ratones , Ratones Endogámicos CBA , Embarazo , Psicoacústica , Ultrasonido
19.
Neuron ; 107(3): 399-401, 2020 08 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32758444

RESUMEN

A circuit understanding of how perception links to response requires integrating neural connectivity, activity, and behavior. In this issue of Neuron, Tasaka et al. (2020) target neurons activated by ultrasonic pup vocalizations and discover a functional synaptic network embedded through acoustically selective TeA neurons that help link the calls to a discriminative maternal behavioral response.


Asunto(s)
Corteza Auditiva , Animales , Humanos , Lactante , Ratones , Neuronas , Ultrasonido
20.
MethodsX ; 7: 101051, 2020.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32983921

RESUMEN

There is growing interest in the mechanisms for natural sensory learning in pro-social contexts. Studies using a maternal model of social behavior in the mouse have provided new insight into the auditory processing of behaviorally relevant pup vocalizations, which are used as communication signals to elicit pup retrieval behavior by adult females. Whether neural and behavioral plasticity in response to these vocalizations reflect auditory associative learning linking the sounds to pups, versus simply a change in maternal responsiveness to evolved vocal signals, remains an open question. Here we describe a T-maze paradigm to track auditory learning as we pair an initially neutral, non-ethological stimulus with delivery of a pup for retrieval, which is intrinsically reinforcing for rodents.•Training is rapid and completely appetitive.•Over a period of 7 × 50-minute daily training sessions, animals increasingly use the sound to guide their arm choice for pup retrieval, with an increase in performance from chance to an average of ~80% on day 7.•This pairing method establishes a newly-formed sensory association using a natural maternal behavioral response, and lays a solid foundation for studies into the neurochemical and circuit mechanisms that mediate auditory associative learning in natural social contexts.

SELECCIÓN DE REFERENCIAS
DETALLE DE LA BÚSQUEDA