Anesthesia modifies sensory representations in the thalamo-cortical circuit but is considered to have a milder impact on peripheral sensory processing. Here, tracking the same neurons across wakefulness and isoflurane or ketamine medetomidine anesthesia, we show that the amplitude and sign of single neuron responses to sounds are massively modified by anesthesia in the cochlear nucleus of the brainstem, the first relay of the auditory system. The reorganization of activity is so profound that decoding of sound representation under anesthesia is not possible based on awake activity.
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