학술논문

Sparse ensemble neural code for a complete vocal repertoire
Document Type
article
Source
Cell Reports. 42(2)
Subject
Biological Sciences
Ecology
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Neurosciences
Behavioral and Social Science
Animals
Auditory Cortex
Vocalization
Animal
Songbirds
Neurons
Prosencephalon
Acoustic Stimulation
CP: Neuroscience
animal communication
auditory categorization
auditory cortex
avian auditory
communication calls in songbirds
concept neuron
ensemble neural code
grandmother cell
multicomponent receptive field
system
vocalizations
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Medical Physiology
Biological sciences
Language
Abstract
The categorization of animal vocalizations into distinct behaviorally relevant groups for communication is an essential operation that must be performed by the auditory system. This auditory object recognition is a difficult task that requires selectivity to the group identifying acoustic features and invariance to renditions within each group. We find that small ensembles of auditory neurons in the forebrain of a social songbird can code the bird's entire vocal repertoire (∼10 call types). Ensemble neural discrimination is not, however, correlated with single unit selectivity, but instead with how well the joint single unit tunings to characteristic spectro-temporal modulations span the acoustic subspace optimized for the discrimination of call types. Thus, akin to face recognition in the visual system, call type recognition in the auditory system is based on a sparse code representing a small number of high-level features and not on highly selective grandmother neurons.