Subcortical adaptive filtering in the auditory system: Associative receptive field plasticity in the dorsal medial geniculate body.
- 1 January 1991
- journal article
- Published by American Psychological Association (APA) in Behavioral Neuroscience
- Vol. 105 (1) , 154-175
- https://doi.org/10.1037//0735-7044.105.1.154
Abstract
Highly specific subcortical receptive field (RF) plasticity was found in the dorsal division of the guinea pig medial geniculate body during cardiac conditioning to a tonal frequency. There was increased response to the conditioned-stimulus (CS) frequency, and there were decreased responses to adjacent frequencies, especially at the pretraining best frequency (BF), which often resulted in a shift of tuning such that the CS became the new BF. Moreover, 1 hr later the effects were stronger, more sharply tuned, and centered on the CS frequency. A sensitization paradigm produced only broad, general increases of response across the RF. These findings reveal that the analysis of sensory RF dynamics is a valuable approach to understanding the neural mechanisms of information processing in learning and memory.Keywords
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