%A Wallace,Mark %A Grimsley,Jasmine %A Anderson,Lucy %A Palmer,Alan %D 2013 %J Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience %C %F %G English %K vocalization,cortical column,Communication,medial geniculate body,guinea pig,temporal processing %Q %R 10.3389/fnsys.2013.00072 %W %L %M %P %7 %8 2013-October-30 %9 Original Research %+ Dr Mark Wallace,Medical Research Council,Institute of Hearing Research,University Park,Nottingham,NG7 2RD,United Kingdom,markw@ihr.mrc.ac.uk %# %! chutter responses in AI %* %< %T Representation of individual elements of a complex call sequence in primary auditory cortex %U https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fnsys.2013.00072 %V 7 %0 JOURNAL ARTICLE %@ 1662-5137 %X Conspecific communication calls can be rhythmic or contain extended, discontinuous series of either constant or frequency modulated harmonic tones and noise bursts separated by brief periods of silence. In the guinea pig, rhythmic calls can produce isomorphic responses within the primary auditory cortex (AI) where single units respond to every call element. Other calls such as the chutter comprise a series of short irregular syllables that vary in their spectral content and are more like human speech. These calls can also evoke isomorphic responses, but may only do so in fields in the auditory belt and not in AI. Here we present evidence that cells in AI treat the individual elements within a syllable as separate auditory objects and respond selectively to one or a subset of them. We used a single chutter exemplar to compare single/multi-unit responses in the low-frequency portion of AI—AI(LF) and the low-frequency part of the thalamic medial geniculate body—MGB(LF) in urethane anaesthetized guinea pigs. Both thalamic and cortical cells responded with brief increases in firing rate to one, or more, of the 8 main elements present in the chutter call. Almost none of the units responded to all 8 elements. While there were many different combinations of responses to between one and five of the elements, MBG(LF) and AI(LF) neurons exhibited the same specific types of response combinations. Nearby units in the upper layers of the cortex tended to respond to similar combinations of elements while the deep layers were less responsive. Thus, the responses from a number of AI units would need to be combined in order to represent the entire chutter call. Our results don't rule out the possibility of constructive convergence but there was no evidence that a convergence of inputs within AI led to a complete representation of all eight elements.