The auditory midbrain (central nucleus of inferior colliculus, ICC) receives multiple brainstem projections and recodes auditory information for perception in higher centers. Many neural response characteristics are represented in gradients (maps) in the three-dimensional ICC space. Map overlap suggests that neurons, depending on their ICC location, encode information in several domains simultaneously by different aspects of their responses.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe time course of poststimulatory adaptation of the inferior colliculus central nucleus (ICC) of CBB6F hybrid mice to sound sequences, specifically, series of four tonal stimuli presented at intervals of 0, 2, 4, 10, 20, 50, 100, 200, 500, 700, 1000, and 1500 ms were studied. Assessment of the adaptation of the entire neuronal population have shown that, at an interstimulus interval of 0-200 ms, the response to the first tone in a series is significantly stronger than those to the second to fourth tones, the strengths of the latter three responses not differing significantly from one another. If the interstimulus interval is 500 ms or longer, the response to none of the tones in a series differs significantly in strength from the others.
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