Auditory System 2: Central Pathways Flashcards

1
Q

Auditory nerve fibers synapse in the _________

A

cochlear nucleus

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2
Q

Two distinct pathways:

A
  1. Recognition of sound patterns:
    • Dorsal and Ventral cochlear nuclei project directly to contralateral inferior colliculus via the lateral lemniscus
  2. Localizing sounds:
    • Ventral cochlear nucleus also projects to the superior olivary complex (SOC) in the pons
    • SOC: 1st place for binaural convergence
    • Subsequently the SOC projects to inferior colliculus
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3
Q

Inferior colliculus relays both pathways to:

A
  • medial geniculate nucleus of the thalamus
    • Note: organization is different from visual system where tectum and geniculate nuclei are separate parallel pathways
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4
Q

Medial geniculate fibers terminate in:

A
  • primary auditory cortex (A-I, area 41)
    • Located in superior temporal lobe, Heschel’s gyrus
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5
Q

Where does the primary auditory cortex project?

A
  • Left hemisphere of humans
    • Wernicke’s areaspeech interpretation
    • Note expansion of cortex on the left.
  • Auditory cortex may be hierarchically organized like visual and somatosensory cortex
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6
Q

Desribe the arrangement of hair cells:

A
  • Hair cells of cochlea are arranged along the basilar membrane
  • Causes hair cells at successive positions to be most sensitive to successively lower pitched tones
  • High frequencies represented at the base (narrow end)
  • Low frequencies at apical
    end (wide)
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7
Q

Receptive field:

A
  • region of the basilar membrane
    to which the auditory cell responsive
  • best frequency = characteristic frequency
  • Frequency tuning curve: describes
    how well a cell responds to higher
    and lower frequencies
  • Increasing sound intensitytuning curve broadens
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8
Q

Orderly arrangement of tone (frequency) sensitivity is then preserved in the __________ of fibers and cells within each pathway.

A

relative positions

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9
Q
  1. Wiernicke’s area is important for _________.
  2. Broca’s area is important for _________.
A
  1. speech analysis
  2. speech production
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10
Q

What would be affected if there were a lesion of the auditory cortex?

A
  • DO NOT AFFECT sensation of simple
    sounds
  • DISRUPT perception of complex sounds
    • speech
  • Wernicke’s aphasia
    • Aphasia = absence of speech
    • a disturbance of higher complex functions by which meanings are comprehended and expressed
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11
Q

CELLS IN AUDITORY CORTEX CAN BE
SELECTIVELY __________ TO COMPLEX
FEATURES OF SOUNDS

A

RESPONSIVE

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12
Q

Selectivity:

Cells in higher cortical areas

A
  • Selectively responsive to combinations of tones
    • speech sounds
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13
Q

How is sound located?

A

Binaural time and intensity differences in the two ears

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14
Q

What detects the audtiory time and intensity differences?

A
  • superior olivary complex
  • “Temporal coincidence” circuitry in the
    superior olive can create a neural code for
    location in space
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