Noise‐rearing disrupts the maturation of multisensory integration |
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Authors: | Jinghong Xu Liping Yu Benjamin A. Rowland Terrence R. Stanford Barry E. Stein |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Neurobiology and Anatomy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, , Winston‐Salem, NC, 27157 USA;2. School of Life Science, East China Normal University, , Shanghai, China |
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Abstract: | It is commonly believed that the ability to integrate information from different senses develops according to associative learning principles as neurons acquire experience with co‐active cross‐modal inputs. However, previous studies have not distinguished between requirements for co‐activation versus co‐variation. To determine whether cross‐modal co‐activation is sufficient for this purpose in visual–auditory superior colliculus (SC) neurons, animals were reared in constant omnidirectional noise. By masking most spatiotemporally discrete auditory experiences, the noise created a sensory landscape that decoupled stimulus co‐activation and co‐variance. Although a near‐normal complement of visual–auditory SC neurons developed, the vast majority could not engage in multisensory integration, revealing that visual–auditory co‐activation was insufficient for this purpose. That experience with co‐varying stimuli is required for multisensory maturation is consistent with the role of the SC in detecting and locating biologically significant events, but it also seems likely that this is a general requirement for multisensory maturation throughout the brain. |
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Keywords: | cat cross‐modal hearing vision |
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