Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4355465 Hearing Research 2011 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Many communication calls contain information about the physical characteristics of the calling animal. During maturation of the guinea pig purr call the pitch becomes lower as the fundamental frequency progressively decreases from 476 to 261 Hz on average. Neurons in the primary auditory cortex (AI) often respond strongly to the purr and we postulated that some of them are capable of distinguishing between purr calls of different pitch. Consequently four pitch-shifted versions of a single call were used as stimuli. Many units in AI (79/182) responded to the purr call either with an onset response or with multiple bursts of firing that were time-locked to the phrases of the call. All had a characteristic frequency ≤5 kHz. Both types of unit altered their firing rate in response to pitch-shifted versions of the call. Of the responsive units, 41% (32/79) had a firing rate locked to the stimulus envelope that was at least 50% higher for one version of the call than any other. Some (14/32) had a preference that could be predicted from their frequency response area while others (18/32) were not predictable. We conclude that about 18% of stimulus-driven cells at the low-frequency end of AI are very sensitive to age-related changes in the purr call.

► The fundamental frequency of the purr call decreases as a guinea pig matures. ► Pitch-shifted versions of the purr were synthesised to represent four ages. ► Some neurons in primary auditory cortex were selective for one call version. ► Primary auditory cortex may be involved in recognition of a caller’s age.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Neuroscience Sensory Systems
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