Decoding neural responses to temporal cues for sound localization
Goodman DFM, Benichoux V, Brette R
eLife
(2013) 2013;2:e01312
Abstract
The activity of sensory neural populations carries information about the
environment. This may be extracted from neural activity using different
strategies. In the auditory brainstem, a recent theory proposes that
sound location in the horizontal plane is decoded from the relative
summed activity of two populations in each hemisphere, whereas earlier
theories hypothesized that the location was decoded from the identity of
the most active cells. We tested the performance of various decoders of
neural responses in increasingly complex acoustical situations, including
spectrum variations, noise, and sound diffraction. We demonstrate that
there is insufficient information in the pooled activity of each
hemisphere to estimate sound direction in a reliable way consistent with
behavior, whereas robust estimates can be obtained from neural activity
by taking into account the heterogeneous tuning of cells. These
estimates can still be obtained when only contralateral neural responses
are used, consistently with unilateral lesion studies.
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