The processing of species-specific communication signals in the auditory system represents an important aspect of animal behavior and is crucial for its social interactions, reproduction, and survival. In this article the neuronal mechanisms underlying the processing of communication signals in the higher centers of the auditory system - inferior colliculus (IC), medial geniculate body (MGB) and auditory cortex (AC) - are reviewed, with particular attention to the guinea pig. The selectivity of neuronal responses for individual calls in these auditory centers in the guinea pig is usually low - most neurons respond to calls as well as to artificial sounds; the coding of complex sounds in the central auditory nuclei is apparently based on the representation of temporal and spectral features of acoustical stimuli in neural networks. Neuronal response patterns in the IC reliably match the sound envelope for calls characterized by one or more short impulses, but do not exactly fit the envelope for long calls. Also, the main spectral peaks are represented by neuronal firing rates in the IC. In comparison to the IC, response patterns in the MGB and AC demonstrate a less precise representation of the sound envelope, especially in the case of longer calls. The spectral representation is worse in the case of low-frequency calls, but not in the case of broad-band ca lls. The emotional content of the call may influence neuronal responses in the auditory pathway, which can be demonstrated by stimulation with time-reversed calls or by measurements performed under different levels of anesthesia. The investigation of the principles of the neural coding of species-specific vocalizations offers some keys for understanding the neural mechanisms underlying human speech perception., D. Šuta, J. Popelář, J. Syka., and Obsahuje bibliografii a bibliografické odkazy
The activity of 194 neurons was recorded in three subdivisions of the medial geniculate body (74 neurons in the ventral, 62 in the medial and 44 neurons in the dorsal subdivision, i.e. vMGB, mMGB and dMGB) of guinea pigs anesthetized with ketamine-xylazine. The discharge properties of neurons were evaluated by means of peristimulus time histograms (PSTHs), interval histograms (INTHs) and auto-correlograms (ACGs). In the whole MGB, the most frequent PSTH responses to pure tone stimuli were onset (43 %) or chopper (32 %). The onset responses were mostly present in the vMGB, whereas chopper responses dominated in the dMGB. In the whole MGB Poisson-like and bimodal INTHs were found in 46 % and 40 % of neurons, respectively. The mMGB revealed fewer bimodal and more symmetrical types of INTH. In the whole MGB, 60 % of units were found to have ACGs typical for short bursts (<100 ms), 23 % for long bursts (>100 ms) and 15 % of units fired without bursts. Neurons in the vMGB were characterized by short bursting, whereas those in the mMGB and dMGB expressed more activity in the long bursts. The results demonstrate that the type of information processing in the vMGB, which belongs to the ”primary” auditory system, is different from that in two other subdivisions of the MGB., E. Kvašňák, J. Popelář, J. Syka., and Obsahuje bibliografii