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William S. Rhode

Bio: William S. Rhode is an academic researcher from University of Wisconsin-Madison. The author has contributed to research in topics: Basilar membrane & Cochlear nucleus. The author has an hindex of 31, co-authored 48 publications receiving 5030 citations.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The amplitude and the phase of vibration of the basilar membrane and the bony limbus of the cochlea were measured in living squirrel monkeys using the Mossbauer technique.
Abstract: The amplitude and the phase of vibration of the basilar membrane and the bony limbus of the cochlea were measured in living squirrel monkeys using the Mossbauer technique. In the middle ear, the vibration of the malleus (and occasionally the incus) was measured. The Mossbauer technique makes possible the measurement of very small velocities, e.g., 0.2 mm/sec. This sensitivity permits measurement of the motion of the malleus at sound‐pressure levels (SPLs) of 90 to 110 dB and measurement of the motion of the basilar membrane at 70 to 120 dB SPL, depending on the frequency. The basilar membrane vibrates nonlinearly for frequencies which produce the largest deflections at the spot on the basilar membrane under observation. The ratio of the displacement of the basilar membrane to that of the malleus was observed to have the following characteristics: (1) As the frequency is increased from a low value, its amplitude increases at 6 dB/oct until just below the maximum ratio where the slope increases to about 24 dB/oct; (2) the maximum ratio was about 24 dB for the SPLs used; (3) for frequencies above that producing the maximum ratio, the drop‐off rate was approximately 100 dB/oct; (4) the amplitude ratio did not drop off indefinitely but tended to level off; (5) the motion of the basilar membrane differs from the motion of the malleus by 90° at very low frequencies; (6) for frequencies below that producing the maximum ratio, the phase differences between the motion of the basilar membrane and that of the malleus is a linear function of frequency; (7) near the frequency corresponding to the maximum ratio, the phase difference decreases at a faster rate; and (8) the phase difference approaches a constant value (7π 8π or 9π) for high frequencies. Anatomical constraints allowed only a small portion of the basal turn to be studied (6.5–7.5 kHz produced maximum deflection of the basilar membrane in this region).

942 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Response patterns for tone pips were not exclusive to individual cell types as two nonfusiform cells were found to exhibit a buildup pattern, and generally the depolarization was sustained for the duration of thetone pip, whereas the hyperpolarization could last as long as 600 ms after the end of the tone pip.
Abstract: The physiology and morphology of fusiform cells in the dorsal cochlear nucleus were studied using extracellular and intracellular recording and intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase. Fusiform cells displayed a variety of responses to tone pips presented at the characteristic frequency; most often these cells exhibited the pauser/buildup pattern defined in earlier studies. The response pattern of each neuron was dependent on frequency and sound-pressure level. Tone pips evoked short-lasting depolarizations of about 10 mV and long-lasting hyperpolarizations of about 10 mV in cells whose resting potentials were -50 to -65 mV. The time courses of both the excitation and the inhibition depended on frequency and sound-pressure level. Generally the depolarization was sustained for the duration of the tone pip, whereas the hyperpolarization could last as long as 600 ms after the end of the tone pip. Often a neuron exhibited a sustained chopper pattern after microelectrode impalement. This was probably a result of a decrease in membrane potential which altered the relative effectiveness of the excitatory and inhibitory inputs. The large, bitufted fusiform cells had many apical dendrites, which branched one to five times and were covered with spines, and fewer basal dendrites, which exhibited little branching and had few appendages. The morphology of fusiform cells varied systematically as a function of location within the dorsal cochlear nucleus. Response patterns for tone pips were not exclusive to individual cell types as two nonfusiform cells were found to exhibit a buildup pattern. Axons of injected neurons left the nucleus via the dorsal acoustic stria and 14 of 15 had collaterals within the dorsal cochlear nucleus.

430 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Physiologically, members of the Oc population have wider dynamic ranges at the characteristic frequency, wider response areas that are typically not flanked by inhibitory sidebands, and responses to short tones that do not show the same form of regularity expressed by sustained choppers.
Abstract: We distinguish two types of large multipolar cells designated sustained (Cs) and onset (Oc) choppers in the anterior posteroventral cochlear nucleus (A-PVCN)/nerve root region on the basis of certain anatomical and physiological features. Cs axons head into the trapezoid body, while Oc axons use the intermediate acoustic stria of Held. At the electron microscopic (EM) level, collateral terminals of Oc axons contain pleomorphic vesicles; Cs terminals contain small round vesicles. Cs dendritic trees tend to be distributed in a stellate fashion while Oc dendritic trees tend to be elongated. At the EM level the sustained chopper somata are sparsely innervated while the proximal dendritic tree receives considerably more input. The Oc somata are highly innervated and this heavy innervation continues out onto the proximal dendrites. Distally the dendritic innervation falls off considerably for both categories. Physiologically, members of the Oc population have wider dynamic ranges at the characteristic frequency (CF), wider response areas that are typically not flanked by inhibitory sidebands, and responses to short tones that do not show the same form of regularity expressed by sustained choppers. Intracellularly the sustained choppers exhibit sustained depolarization to short tones for the duration of the stimulus with resultant regular spiking at a rate that is stimulus level dependent. The response to swept tone shows this same level-dependent regularity. In response to tones, the Oc cells also show a sustained depolarization whose amplitude is stimulus-level dependent but whose range is much greater and whose onset is initiated more abruptly. Although the onset component of the Oc spike output is reliably initiated by these levels of depolarization, regular firing to the sustained depolarization is not initiated at levels of depolarization that would surely generate regular firing in sustained choppers. This regularity is also absent in the swept tone response despite marked levels of excitation.

288 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Neurons in the cochlear nuclei synchronize on average more highly to the modulation frequency than fibers of comparable CF, threshold, and spontaneous rate in the auditory nerve, and among auditory nerve fibers, low- and medium-spontaneous-rate units phase-lock with greater precision than comparable high-SR units at any given frequency, consistent with previous studies.
Abstract: 1. Amplitude modulation (AM) is a pervasive property of acoustic communication systems. In the present study we investigate neural temporal mechanisms in the auditory nerve and cochlear nuclei of the pentobarbital sodium-anesthesized cat associated with the neural coding of 100% AM tones, both in quiet and in the presence of wideband, quasi-flat-spectrum noise. The AM carrier frequency was set to the neuron's characteristic frequency (CF) and the sound pressure level (SPL) of acoustic stimuli was varied over a wide dynamic range of intensities ( 1 kHz. As a result, phase-locking performance is measured on the basis of two parameters, maximum synchronization, irrespective of stimulus frequency, and the upper frequency limit for significant phase-locking. 4. Cochlear nucleus neurons may be divided into three distinct groups on the basis of maximum synchronization capability. In group 1 are the primary-like (PL) units of the anteroventral division, whose phase-locking capabilities are comparable with those of high-SR ANFs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

273 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A set of experiments was conducted using the Mössbauer effect to determine the vibratory characteristics of the basilar membrane, Reissner's membrane, the malleus, incus, and oval window in squirrel monkey to show good qualitative agreement.
Abstract: A set of experiments was conducted using the Mossbauer effect to determine the vibratory characteristics of the basilar membrane, Reissner’s membrane, the malleus, incus, and oval window in squirrel monkey. A few measurements were also made in guinea pig in the basal cochlear region. The nonlinear vibration properties of the basilar membrane are described in detail for the midfrequency region in the squirrel monkey. Only in this region have nonlinear effects been observed. A comparison of mechanical and neural data indicates good qualitative agreement.

219 citations


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The high sensitivity and sharp-frequency tuning, as well as compression and other nonlinearities (two-tone suppression and intermodulation distortion), are highly labile, indicating the presence in normal cochleae of a positive feedback from the organ of Corti, the "cochlear amplifier."
Abstract: In mammals, environmental sounds stimulate the auditory receptor, the cochlea, via vibrations of the stapes, the innermost of the middle ear ossicles. These vibrations produce displacement waves that travel on the elongated and spirally wound basilar membrane (BM). As they travel, waves grow in amplitude, reaching a maximum and then dying out. The location of maximum BM motion is a function of stimulus frequency, with high-frequency waves being localized to the “base” of the cochlea (near the stapes) and low-frequency waves approaching the “apex” of the cochlea. Thus each cochlear site has a characteristic frequency (CF), to which it responds maximally. BM vibrations produce motion of hair cell stereocilia, which gates stereociliar transduction channels leading to the generation of hair cell receptor potentials and the excitation of afferent auditory nerve fibers. At the base of the cochlea, BM motion exhibits a CF-specific and level-dependent compressive nonlinearity such that responses to low-level, near-CF stimuli are sensitive and sharply frequency-tuned and responses to intense stimuli are insensitive and poorly tuned. The high sensitivity and sharp-frequency tuning, as well as compression and other nonlinearities (two-tone suppression and intermodulation distortion), are highly labile, indicating the presence in normal cochleae of a positive feedback from the organ of Corti, the “cochlear amplifier.” This mechanism involves forces generated by the outer hair cells and controlled, directly or indirectly, by their transduction currents. At the apex of the cochlea, nonlinearities appear to be less prominent than at the base, perhaps implying that the cochlear amplifier plays a lesser role in determining apical mechanical responses to sound. Whether at the base or the apex, the properties of BM vibration adequately account for most frequency-specific properties of the responses to sound of auditory nerve fibers.

1,423 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
02 Dec 1999-Nature
TL;DR: The results indicate that a combinatorial neural code, based on rapid associations of groups of neurons co-ordinating their activity at the single spike level, is possible within a cortical-like network.
Abstract: The classical view of neural coding has emphasized the importance of information carried by the rate at which neurons discharge action potentials. More recent proposals that information may be carried by precise spike timing1,2,3,4,5 have been challenged by the assumption that these neurons operate in a noisy fashion—presumably reflecting fluctuations in synaptic input6—and, thus, incapable of transmitting signals with millisecond fidelity. Here we show that precisely synchronized action potentials can propagate within a model of cortical network activity that recapitulates many of the features of biological systems. An attractor, yielding a stable spiking precision in the (sub)millisecond range, governs the dynamics of synchronization. Our results indicate that a combinatorial neural code, based on rapid associations of groups of neurons co-ordinating their activity at the single spike level, is possible within a cortical-like network.

1,002 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
07 Mar 2002-Nature
TL;DR: This work synthesized stimuli that they call ‘auditory chimaeras’, which have the envelope of one sound and the fine structure of another, and shows that the envelope is most important for speech reception, and thefine structure is mostImportant for pitch perception and sound localization.
Abstract: By Fourier's theorem1, signals can be decomposed into a sum of sinusoids of different frequencies. This is especially relevant for hearing, because the inner ear performs a form of mechanical Fourier transform by mapping frequencies along the length of the cochlear partition. An alternative signal decomposition, originated by Hilbert2, is to factor a signal into the product of a slowly varying envelope and a rapidly varying fine time structure. Neurons in the auditory brainstem3,4,5,6 sensitive to these features have been found in mammalian physiological studies. To investigate the relative perceptual importance of envelope and fine structure, we synthesized stimuli that we call ‘auditory chimaeras’, which have the envelope of one sound and the fine structure of another. Here we show that the envelope is most important for speech reception, and the fine structure is most important for pitch perception and sound localization. When the two features are in conflict, the sound of speech is heard at a location determined by the fine structure, but the words are identified according to the envelope. This finding reveals a possible acoustic basis for the hypothesized ‘what’ and ‘where’ pathways in the auditory cortex7,8,9,10.

887 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The picture that emerges is that temporal modulations are a critical stimulus attribute that assists us in the detection, discrimination, identification, parsing, and localization of acoustic sources and that this wide-ranging role is reflected in dedicated physiological properties at different anatomical levels.
Abstract: Joris, P. X., C. E. Schreiner, and A. Rees. Neural Processing of Amplitude-Modulated Sounds. Physiol Rev 84: 541–577, 2004; 10.1152/physrev.00029.2003.—Amplitude modulation (AM) is a temporal featu...

856 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: Alk-3-en-1-ols are produced in good yields from isobutylene and formaldehyde in the presence of organic carboxylic acid salts of Group IB metals.
Abstract: The yield of alkenols and cycloalkenols is substantially improved by carrying out the reaction of olefins with formaldehyde in the presence of selected catalysts. In accordance with one embodiment, alk-3-en-1-ols are produced in good yields from isobutylene and formaldehyde in the presence of organic carboxylic acid salts of Group IB metals.

851 citations