Neurons in the lateral belt areas of rhesus monkey
auditory cortex prefer complex sounds to pure tones, but functional
specializations of these multiple maps in the superior temporal
region have not been determined. We tested the specificity of neurons
in the lateral belt with species-specific communication calls presented
at different azimuth positions. We found that neurons in the anterior
belt are more selective for the type of call, whereas neurons in the caudal belt consistently show the greatest spatial selectivity. These
results suggest that cortical processing of auditory spatial and
pattern information is performed in specialized streams rather than one
homogeneously distributed system.