Trends in Neurosciences
Volume 22, Issue 3, 1 March 1999, Pages 128-135
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Review
Maps versus clusters: different representations of auditory space in the midbrain and forebrain

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Abstract

The auditory system determines the location of stimuli based on the evaluation of specific cues. The analysis begins in the tonotopic pathway, where these cues are processed in parallel, frequency-specific channels. This frequency-specific information is processed further in the midbrain and in the forebrain by specialized, space-processing pathways that integrate information across frequency channels, creating high-order neurons tuned to specific locations in space. Remarkably, the results of this integrative step are represented very differently in the midbrain and forebrain: in the midbrain, space is represented in maps, whereas, in the forebrain, space is represented in clusters of similarly tuned neurons. We propose that these different representations reflect the different roles that these two brain areas have in guiding behavior.

Keywords

Neuroscience

Keywords

Sound localization
Spatial hearing
Auditory system
Auditory cortex
Superior colliculus
Optic tectum
Inferior colliculus
Barn owl

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