42. Chopper responses to amplitude-modulated tones: stochastic mode-locking theory and observed spiking patterns?

J. Laudanski1 jonathan.laudanski@maths.nottingham.ac.uk S. Coombes1 A. Palmer2 C. Sumner2

1School of Mathematical Sciences, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK
2MRC Institute of Hearing research, Nottingham, UK

Responses to amplitude-modulated pure tones have been used extensively to assess temporal properties of neurons across the auditory system. The synchronisation to the modulation frequency has mostly been measured by an index called vector strength. This index is based on the distribution of spikes along the period of modulation. One obtains a low value when the spikes occur evenly across the period and a high value when they are sharply distributed around a single time. In the ventral cochlear nucleus, chopper units have been found to show band-pass temporal responses at high sound pressure level and low-pass temporal responses at low level. However, the fine structure of the responses remains uncharacterised.

Here, we show that data obtained from chopper neurons in response to amplitude-modulated tone exhibit more complex synchronised discharge patterns, reminiscent of mode-locked states. Theses responses can be organised around an Arnol’d tongue structure of a periodically forced model accounting for the sub-threshold properties of the T-multipolar cells. Numerical simulations of a stochastic version of this integrate-and-fire model give response patterns similar to the one observed experimentally. Thus, the results tend to show that care should be taken when considering the temporal properties of a neuron only on the basis of its vector strength.