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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of electrical stimulation of the crossed olivocochlear bundle on auditory nerve response to tones in noise

Raimond L. Winslow, +1 more
- 01 Apr 1987 - 
- Vol. 57, Iss: 4, pp 1002-1021
TLDR
Increases in the threshold of noise-induced shift due to COCB stimulation therefore suggests an interaction between the mechanism of two-tone rate suppression and the mechanism by which C OCB stimulation produces dynamic range shift.
Abstract
The discharge rates of single auditory-nerve fibers responding to best-frequency (BF) tones of varying level presented simultaneously with fixed level broadband noise were recorded with and without electrical stimulation of the crossed olivocochlear bundle (COCB). In the absence of COCB stimulation, monotonic increases in noise level produce monotonic increases in the low-level noise-driven response rate of auditory nerve fibers. As a result of adaptation, these increases in noise-driven response rate produce monotonic decreases in saturation discharge rate. At high noise levels, these compressive effects may eliminate the differential rate response of auditory nerve fibers to BF tones. COCB stimulation can restore this differential rate response by producing large decreases in noise-driven response rate and large increases in saturation discharge rate. In backgrounds of quiet, COCB stimulation is known to shift the dynamic range of single auditory nerve fiber BF tone responses to higher stimulus levels. In the presence of background noise, COCB stimulation produces upward shift of dynamic range, which decreases with increasing noise level. At high noise levels, COCB-induced decompression of rate-level functions may occur with little or no dynamic range shift. This enables auditory nerve fibers to signal changes in tone level with changes in discharge rate at lower signal-to-noise ratios than would be possible otherwise. Broadband noise also produces upward shift of the dynamic range of single auditory nerve fiber BF tone response. Noise-induced dynamic range shift of BF tone response was measured as a function of noise level with and without COCB stimulation. COCB stimulation elevates the threshold of noise-induced dynamic range shift. This shift is thought to result from two-tone rate suppression. Increases in the threshold of noise-induced shift due to COCB stimulation therefore suggests an interaction between the mechanism of two-tone rate suppression and the mechanism by which COCB stimulation produces dynamic range shift. These interactions were further investigated by recording auditory nerve fiber rate responses to fixed-level BF excitor tones presented simultaneously with fixed-frequency variable level suppressor tones. Rate responses were recorded with and without COCB stimulation. Experimental results were quantified using a phenomenological model of two-tone rate suppression presented by Sachs and Abbas.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of contralateral auditory stimuli on active cochlear micro-mechanical properties in human subjects.

TL;DR: The present study investigates the possibility that contralateral auditory stimulation along medial efferent system pathways may alter active cochlear micromechanics and hence affect evoked oto-acoustic emissions in humans, and has here a model for functional exploration of the medial olivocochlear efferentSystem.
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Auditory processing in autism spectrum disorder: a review.

TL;DR: Findings show substantial evidence for atypical processing of auditory information in ASD at behavioural and neural levels and the interpretation of these findings with respect to various cognitive accounts of ASD is discussed and suggestions offered for further research.
Book ChapterDOI

Physiology of Olivocochlear Efferents

TL;DR: Efferent physiology in mammalian cochlear efferents and a few other hair cell systems is reviewed for the insight provided into mammalian efferent physiology.
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Between sound and perception: reviewing the search for a neural code

TL;DR: A multiplexed coding of complex sound is proposed whereby the contours set up widespread synchrony across those neurons in all auditory cortical areas that are activated by the texture of sound.
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TL;DR: The results for chopper units suggest a model for stellate cells in which a regularly firing action potential generator is driven by the summation of the AN inputs to the cell, where the summations is low-pass filtered by the membrane capacitance of the cell.
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