Behavioral and Single-Neuron Sensitivity to Millisecond Variations in Temporally Patterned Communication Signals.
Christa A BakerLisa MaChelsea R CasarealeBruce A CarlsonPublished in: The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience (2017)
The timing patterns of action potentials, or spikes, play important roles in representing information in the nervous system. However, how these temporal patterns are recognized by downstream neurons is not well understood. Here we use the electrosensory system of mormyrid weakly electric fish to investigate how a population of neurons with diverse temporal filtering properties encodes behaviorally relevant input timing patterns, and how this relates to behavioral sensitivity. We show that fish are behaviorally sensitive to millisecond variations in natural, temporally patterned communication signals, and that the responses of individual midbrain neurons are also sensitive to variation in these patterns. In fact, the output of single neurons contains enough information to discriminate stereotyped communication signals produced by different individuals.
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