|
 |
Malcolm N. Semple
Neurobiology of hearing
Research in my laboratory is concerned with central auditory
processing. Our physiological studies of single neurons at the
auditory brainstem, midbrain and cortex, permit us to investigate the
representation of acoustic signals throughout the central auditory
pathway. My training in central auditory neurophysiology began at
Monash University, Australia, where I completed my Ph.D. After
postdoctoral training at the University of Oxford, England, I held
several appointments at the University of California, Irvine, before
joining New York University in 1995.
Much of my effort has been directed towards the neural mechanisms
of directional hearing. Particular emphasis has been on how the
auditory system responds to time-varying binaural cues, (as are
commonly generated through head movements or through motion of sound
sources). We have studied the neural processing of sounds ranging from
simple stationary binaural tones to simulations of motion. For
successful encoding of interaural time differences, binaural neurons
at the first stage of binaural processing (the auditory brainstem)
must be able to discriminate very small differences in time of arrival
of synaptic inputs originating from the two ears. It follows that
these neurons should be specialized to preserve temporal information
present in the discharge of presynaptic elements and hence should not
be sensitive to motion cues. Although our studies have confirmed that
primary binaural neurons are relatively insensitive to motion, we have
found that certain neurons in the auditory midbrain and cortex are
much more sensitive to simulated motion than to static binaural
stimuli. Thus, it appears that motion sensitivity in the higher
auditory pathway results from a transformation of the initial neural
representation. Moreover, we have found that midbrain and cortical
responses to time-varying components of a stimulus can have a
remarkably long-lasting conditioning effect on the response to an
immediately succeeding static component. In order to investigate the
behavioral significance of these conditioning effects, we are
currently studying cortical processing in behaving primates trained to
discriminate dynamic spatial cues.
Recently we have demonstrated that neural sensitivity to
auditory motion is but one instance of the brain's emphasis on the
relevance of dynamic features of acoustic stimuli. The auditory system
has the fascinating capacity to encode complex signals with fine
temporal precision and then to represent these events over much longer
time-scales as unified acoustic objects, in which the location of the
sound source is just one of the unifying attributes. With this in
mind, we are investigating the neural processing of a broad range of
dynamic acoustic signals, including amplitude and frequency
modulations.
E-mail: mal@cns.nyu.edu
Representative Publications
Spitzer, M. W. and Semple, M. N. (1991). Interaural phase coding in
auditory midbrain: Influence of dynamic stimulus features. Science
254, 721-724.
Semple, M. N. and Kitzes, L. M. (1993). Binaural processing of
sound pressure level in cat primary auditory cortex: Evidence for a
representation based on absolute levels rather than interaural level
differences. Journal of Neurophysiology 69, 449-461.
Phillips, D. P., Semple, M. N., Calford, M. B. and Kitzes,
L. M. (1994). Level dependence of frequency representation in cat
primary auditory cortex. Experimental Brain Research 102, 210-226.
Spitzer, M. W. and Semple, M. N. (1995). Neurons sensitive to
interaural phase disparity in gerbil superior olive: Diverse monaural
and temporal response properties. Journal of Neurophysiology 73,
1668-1690.
Calford, M. B. and Semple, M. N. (1995). Monaural inhibition in cat
auditory cortex. Journal of Neurophysiology 73, 1876-1891.
Sanes, D.H., Malone, B.J. and Semple, M.N. (1998) Role of synaptic
inhibition in processing of dynamic binaural level stimuli. Journal of
Neuroscience 18, 794-803.
Spitzer, M.W. and Semple, M.N. (1998) Transformation of binaural
response properties in the ascending auditory pathway: influence of
time-varying interaural phase disparity. Journal of Neurophysiology 80,
3062-3076.
Thornton, S.K., Semple, M.N. , Sanes, D.H. (1999) Development of auditory
motion processing in the gerbil inferior colliculus.
European Journal of Neurosciences 11, 1414-1420
Krishna, B.S. and Semple, M.N. (2000) Auditory temporal processing:
responses to sinusoidally amplitude-modulated tones in the inferior colliculus.
Journal of Neurophysiology, 84: 255-273
Malone, B.J. and Semple, M.N. (2001) Effects of stimulus context on the
representation of frequency in the inferior colliculus.
Journal of Neurophysiology 86, 1113-1130.
Malone, B.J., Scott, B.H. and Semple, M.N. (2002) Context-dependent adaptive
coding of interaural phase disparity in the auditory cortex of awake macaques.
Journal of Neuroscience 22, 4625-4638.
Borisyuk, A., Semple, M.N. and Rinzel, J. (2002). Adaptation and inhibition
underlie responses to time-varying interaural phase cues in a model of
inferior colliculus neurons. J Neurophysiology 88: 2134-2146.
Semple M.N. and Scott B.H. (2003). Cortical mechanisms in hearing.
Current Opinion in Neurobiology 13, 167-173.
Ter-Mikaelian, M., Sanes, D.H., Semple, M.N. (2007). Transformation
of temporal properties between auditory midbrain and cortex in the
awake Mongolian gerbil. Journal of Neuroscience 27, 6091-6102.
Scott, B.H., Malone, B.J., Semple, M.N. (2007). Effect of behavioral
context on representation of a spatial cue in core auditory cortex of
awake macaques. Journal of Neuroscience 27, 6489-6499.
Malone, B.J., Scott, B.H., Semple, M.N. (2007). Dynamic amplitude
coding in the auditory cortex of awake rhesus macaques. Journal of
Neurophysiology 98, 1451-1474.
|
|