051 Central Auditory processing 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Which type of cochlear nerve fibres synapses with IHC?

A

Type I -> detection of sound

one to one mapping

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2
Q

Which type of cochlear nerve fibres synpase with outer hair cells?

A

Type II -> amplification and tuning

many to one

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3
Q

What is the coding range?

A

The range of sound intensity that a auditory fibre will signal. High spontaneous rate fibres will have a lower range for lower input intensities compared to low spontaneous rate fibres.

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4
Q

Where are the 2 cochlear nuclei found and what are their separate functions?

A

Dorsal cochlear nuclei: complex sounds

Ventral cochlear nuclei: simple sounds

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5
Q

Where is the 1st point of convergence of information from the 2 ears?

A

Superior olivary nucleus –> binaural hearing

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6
Q

Which part of the olive is repsonsible for interaural level differences?

A

Lateral superior olivary nucleus

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7
Q

Which part of the olive is responsible for interaural timing differences?

A

Medial superior olivary nucleus

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8
Q

What occurs when tracking interaural level differences?

A

fibres from the opposite ear will invert Glutamate to glycine in the medial nucleus of the trapezoid body, causing less excitation of the LSO.

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9
Q

What occurs when tracking interaural time differences?

A

due to phase locking, the ear further from the sound will cause inhibition delays at the post synaptic potential.

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10
Q

Where is the site of convergence from ascending and descending pathways?

A

Inferior colliculus

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11
Q

Which frequencies is the dorsal & lateral inferior colliculus responsible for?

A

Low frequencies - binaural

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12
Q

Which frequencies is the ventral & medial inferior colliculus responsible for?

A

High frequences - binaural

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13
Q

What is the role of the superior colliculus?

A

Integrating visual input with auditory input
Contains the only map of auditory space in the brain.
Rostral and medial –> high in elevation sounds and close to midline.
Caudal and lateral –> low in elevation sounds and lateral to midline.

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14
Q

What does the median MGN do?

A

Duration and intensity, auditory attention and arousal

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15
Q

What does the dorsal MGN do?

A

Plasticity and learning of sounds - most complex

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16
Q

What does the ventral mGN do?

A

Sends information to the primary auditory cortex

17
Q

Where is the primary auditory cortex located?

A

In the Heschl’s gyri of the temporal lobe.

18
Q

Describe the specialization of hemispheres in terms of auditory processing?

A

Right hemisphere is for pitch direction

Left hemisphere is for suond duration

19
Q

Describe the olivo-cochlear efferent system to the inner and outer hair cells?

A

Lateral superior olive sends fibres to inner hair cells to influence the firing of auditory nerve fibres.

Medial superior olive sends fibres to outer hair cells to influence the amplification for different frequencies.