Abstract
Neurons in the auditory system respond to recent stimulus-level history by adapting their response functions according to the statistics of the stimulus, partially alleviating the so-called "dynamic-range problem." However, the mechanism and source of this adaptation along the auditory pathway remain unknown. Inclusion of power-law dynamics in a phenomenological model of the inner hair cell (IHC)-auditory nerve (AN) synapse successfully explained neural adaptation to sound-level statistics, including the time course of adaptation of the mean firing rate and changes in the dynamic range observed in AN responses. A direct comparison between model responses to a dynamic stimulus and to an "inversely gated" static background suggested that AN dynamic-range adaptation largely results from the adaptation produced by the response history. These results support the hypothesis that the potential mechanism underlying the dynamic-range adaptation observed at the level of the auditory nerve is located peripheral to the spike generation mechanism and central to the IHC receptor potential. Copyright © 2010 the authors.
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CITATION STYLE
Zilany, M. S. A., & Carney, L. H. (2010). Power-law dynamics in an auditory-nerve model can account for neural adaptation to sound-level statistics. Journal of Neuroscience, 30(31), 10380–10390. https://doi.org/10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0647-10.2010
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