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A novel coding mechanism for social vocalizations in the lateral amygdala. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The amygdala is crucial for processing acoustic signals and coordinating emotional responses, particularly in how it reacts to social vocalizations in big brown bats.
  • Researchers found that neurons in the amygdala responded to most social sounds but varied their firing rates and, more importantly, the duration of their responses.
  • The study revealed that the duration of neuron firing (persistent firing) conveyed more informational value about vocalizations than the rate at which they fired, especially for aggressive vocalizations, indicating that the amygdala uses this persistent firing to effectively distinguish between different types of vocal sounds within a behavioral context.

Article Abstract

The amygdala plays a central role in evaluating the significance of acoustic signals and coordinating the appropriate behavioral responses. To understand how amygdalar responses modulate auditory processing and drive emotional expression, we assessed how neurons respond to and encode information that is carried within complex acoustic stimuli. We characterized responses of single neurons in the lateral nucleus of the amygdala to social vocalizations and synthetic acoustic stimuli in awake big brown bats. Neurons typically responded to most of the social vocalizations presented (mean = nine of 11 vocalizations) but differentially modulated both firing rate and response duration. Surprisingly, response duration provided substantially more information about vocalizations than did spike rate. In most neurons, variation in response duration depended, in part, on persistent excitatory discharge that extended beyond stimulus duration. Information in persistent firing duration was significantly greater than in spike rate, and the majority of neurons displayed more information in persistent firing, which was more likely to be observed in response to aggressive vocalizations (64%) than appeasement vocalizations (25%), suggesting that persistent firing may relate to the behavioral context of vocalizations. These findings suggest that the amygdala uses a novel coding strategy for discriminating among vocalizations and underscore the importance of persistent firing in the general functioning of the amygdala.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3289453PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/jn.00422.2011DOI Listing

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