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Michael P. Kilgard Sensory Experience and Cortical Plasticity University of Texas at Dallas
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Cortical plasticity depends upon: Sensory experience Behavioral relevance
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The Cholinergic Basal Forebrain Provides a Diffuse Neuromodulatory Input to the Cortex Nucleus Basalis
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Exploring the Principles of Cortical Plasticity using: Systematic Variation of Sensory Experience Nucleus Basalis Stimulation to Gate Cortical Plasticity Experience or Instinct Connectivity & Dynamics Plasticity Neural Representation Importance External world
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NB stimulation is paired with a sound several hundred times per day for ~20 days. Pairing occurs in awake unrestrained adult rats. Stimulation evokes no behavioral response. Stimulation efficacy is monitored with EEG.
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Extracellular Recordings Detailed Reconstruction of the Distributed Cortical Response
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Best Frequency Science, 1998
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Tone Frequency - kHz Nucleus Basalis Stimulation Generates Map Plasticity that is Specific to the Paired Tone N = 20 rats; 1,060 A1 sites
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Nature Neuroscience, 1998 Temporal Plasticity is Specific to the Paired Repetition Rate N = 15 rats, 720 sites
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Journal of Neurophysiology, 2001 Carrier frequency variability prevented map expansion and allowed temporal plasticity. N = 13 rats, 687 sites
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Stimulus Paired with NB Activation Determines Degree and Direction of Receptive Field Plasticity Frequency Bandwidth Plasticity N = 52 rats; 2,616 sites
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Frequency Bandwidth is Shaped by Spatial and Temporal Stimulus Features Modulation Rate (pps) 0 5 10 15 Tone Probability 15% 50 % 100% Journal of Neurophysiology, 2001
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Neuron 1 Inputs to Neuron A Neuron 2 Receptive Field Overlap Neuron ANeuron B Inputs to Neuron B Spike synchronization and RF overlap are correlated. Brosch and Schreiner, 1999
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After Map Expansion: ~85% shared inputs After Sharper Frequency Tuning: ~25% shared inputs What is the effect of cortical plasticity on spike synchonization? Before plasticity: ~50% shared inputs Before Plasticity: ~50% shared inputs
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-50-40 -30-20 -10 0 1020304050 0 200 400 600 800 1000 1200 Number of Intervals Interval (msec) Cross-correlation: TC 0 25C1.MAT x TC 0 25C2.MAT Cross-correlation Shift Predictor Correlation strength = correlation peak in normalized cross-correlation histogram Correlation width = width at half height of correlation peak
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Experience-Dependent Changes in Cortical Synchronization Map expansion sharpened synchronization –15pps 9kHz tone trains 50% increase in cross-correlation height (p<0.0001) 17% decrease in cross-correlation width (p<0.01) Bandwidth narrowing smeared synchronization –Two different tone frequencies 50% decrease in cross-correlation height (p<0.0001) 22% increase in cross-correlation width (p<0.001) Intermediate stimuli caused no change in synchronization –15pps tone trains with several different carrier frequencies No change in cross-correlation height or width N = 23 rats; 1,129 sites; 404 pairs
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Experience-Dependent Changes in Cortical Synchronization (con’t) Broadband ripple stimulus sharpened synchronization –Sinusoidal power spectrum (one cycle / 6kHz ) 54% increase in cross-correlation height (p<0.0001) 27% decrease in cross-correlation width (p<0.01) N = 9 rats; 310 sites; 147 pairs
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Pairing NB stimulation with a spectrotemporal sequence sharpens response discharge coherence.
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Peak Latency: 15.2 vs. 18.2 ms (p< 0.00001) Difference Naive After HLN N = 13 rats, 450 sites Time to Peak Response (ms) Time (ms) Spikes per Second Sharpened Cortical Response to High-Low-Noise Sequence
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Increased Population Discharge Coherence
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Context-Dependent Facilitation
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5% of sites in naïve animals respond with more spikes to the 5 kHz tone when preceded by the 12 kHz tone, compared to 25% after sequence pairing. (p< 0.005) 35% of sites in naïve animals respond with more spikes to the noise when preceded by the high and low tones, compared to 58% after sequence pairing. (p< 0.01) 13% of sites in naïve animals respond with more spikes to the 12 kHz tone when preceded by the 5 kHz tone, compared to 10% after sequence pairing. Context-Dependent Facilitation - Group Data N = 13 rats, 261 sites
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Sensory Experience Controls: Cortical Topography Receptive Field Size Maximum Following Rate Spectrotemporal Selectivity Synchronization
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55% increase in response strength –1.4 vs. 0.9 spikes per noise burst (p< 0.0001) 22% decrease in frequency bandwidth –1.8 vs. 2.2 octaves at 30dB above threshold (p< 0.0001) One millisecond decrease in minimum latency –15.8 vs. 16.8 ms (p< 0.005) Two decibel decrease in threshold –17 vs. 19 dB ms (p< 0.01) Increased synchronization –13% increase in cross-correlation height (p< 0.01) Enrichment Effects N = 14 rats, 738 sites
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Experience or Instinct Connectivity & Dynamics Plasticity Neural Representation Importance External world Rules of Cortical Plasticity
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Experience or Instinct Connectivity & Dynamics Plasticity Neural Representation Importance External world
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Experience or Instinct Connectivity & Dynamics Plasticity Behavioral Change Neural Representation Importance External world
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Spectral Stimuli
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Temporal Stimuli
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Rules of Cortical Plasticity
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Behavioral Relevance Neural Activity - Internal Representation External World -Sensory Input Neural Plasticity - Learning and Memory Plasticity Rules - Educated Guess
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RF Increase Increased Synchrony Temporal Task: BF Pairing 15 pps, 9 kHz Tone Width
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RF Decrease Decreased Synchrony Spectral Task: BF Pairing 2 Frequencies Randomly Interleaved Width
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RF Increase No Change in Synchrony Temporal and Spectral Task: BF Pairing 15 pps Multiple Frequencies Width
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No Change in RF Increased Synchrony Spectral-temporal Task: BF Pairing Moving Stimuli (FM’s) Width
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RF Decrease Increased Synchrony Complex Spectral Task: BF Pairing Steady State High Density Ripple Width
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