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Dive into the research topics where Chloé Huetz is active.

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Featured researches published by Chloé Huetz.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2009

A Spike-Timing Code for Discriminating Conspecific Vocalizations in the Thalamocortical System of Anesthetized and Awake Guinea Pigs

Chloé Huetz; Benedicte Philibert; Jean-Marc Edeline

Understanding how communication sounds are processed and encoded in the central auditory system is critical to understanding the neural bases of acoustic communication. Here, we examined neuronal representations of species-specific vocalizations, which are communication sounds that many species rely on for survival and social interaction. In some species, the evoked responses of auditory cortex neurons are stronger in response to natural conspecific vocalizations than to their time-reversed, spectrally identical, counterparts. We applied information theory-based analyses to single-unit spike trains collected in the auditory cortex (n = 139) and auditory thalamus (n = 135) of anesthetized animals as well as in the auditory cortex (n = 119) of awake guinea pigs during presentation of four conspecific vocalizations. Few thalamic and cortical cells (<10%) displayed a firing rate preference for the natural version of these vocalizations. In contrast, when the information transmitted by the spike trains was quantified with a temporal precision of 10–50 ms, many cells (>75%) displayed a significant amount of information (i.e., >2SD above chance levels), especially in the awake condition. The computed correlation index between spike trains (Rcorr, defined by Schreiber et al., 2003) indicated similar spike-timing reliability for both the natural and time-reversed versions of each vocalization, but higher reliability for awake animals compared with anesthetized animals. Based on temporal discharge patterns, even cells that were only weakly responsive to vocalizations displayed a significant level of information. These findings emphasize the importance of temporal discharge patterns as a coding mechanism for natural communication sounds, particularly in awake animals.


Neurobiology of Learning and Memory | 2007

Neural representations during sleep: From sensory processing to memory traces

Elizabeth Hennevin; Chloé Huetz; Jean-Marc Edeline

In the course of a day, the brain undergoes large-scale changes in functional modes, from attentive wakefulness to the deepest stage of sleep. The present paper evaluates how these state changes affect the neural bases of sensory and cognitive representations. Are organized neural representations still maintained during sleep? In other words, despite the absence of conscious awareness, do neuronal signals emitted during sleep contain information and have a functional relevance? Through a critical evaluation of the animal and human literature, neural representations at different levels of integration (from the most elementary sensory level to the most cognitive one) are reviewed. Recordings of neuronal activity in animals at presentation of neutral or significant stimuli show that some analysis of the external word remains possible during sleep, allowing recognition of behaviorally relevant stimuli. Event-related brain potentials in humans confirm the preservation of some sensory integration and discriminative capacity. Behavioral and neuroimaging studies in humans substantiate the notion that memory representations are reactivated and are reorganized during post-learning sleep; these reorganisations may account for the beneficial effects of sleep on behavioral performance. Electrophysiological results showing replay of neuronal sequences in animals are presented, and their relevance as neuronal correlates of memory reactivation is discussed. The reviewed literature provides converging evidence that structured neural representations can be activated during sleep. Which reorganizations unique to sleep benefit memory representations, and to what extent the operations still efficient in processing environmental information during sleep are similar to those underlying the non-conscious, automatic processing continually at work in wakefulness, are challenging questions open to investigation.


Biological Reviews | 2016

Acoustic sequences in non-human animals: a tutorial review and prospectus

Arik Kershenbaum; Daniel T. Blumstein; Marie A. Roch; Çağlar Akçay; Gregory A. Backus; Mark A. Bee; Kirsten Bohn; Yan Cao; Gerald G. Carter; Cristiane Cäsar; Michael H. Coen; Stacy L. DeRuiter; Laurance R. Doyle; Shimon Edelman; Ramon Ferrer-i-Cancho; Todd M. Freeberg; Ellen C. Garland; Morgan L. Gustison; Heidi E. Harley; Chloé Huetz; Melissa Hughes; Julia Hyland Bruno; Amiyaal Ilany; Dezhe Z. Jin; Michael T. Johnson; Chenghui Ju; Jeremy Karnowski; Bernard Lohr; Marta B. Manser; Brenda McCowan

Animal acoustic communication often takes the form of complex sequences, made up of multiple distinct acoustic units. Apart from the well‐known example of birdsong, other animals such as insects, amphibians, and mammals (including bats, rodents, primates, and cetaceans) also generate complex acoustic sequences. Occasionally, such as with birdsong, the adaptive role of these sequences seems clear (e.g. mate attraction and territorial defence). More often however, researchers have only begun to characterise – let alone understand – the significance and meaning of acoustic sequences. Hypotheses abound, but there is little agreement as to how sequences should be defined and analysed. Our review aims to outline suitable methods for testing these hypotheses, and to describe the major limitations to our current and near‐future knowledge on questions of acoustic sequences. This review and prospectus is the result of a collaborative effort between 43 scientists from the fields of animal behaviour, ecology and evolution, signal processing, machine learning, quantitative linguistics, and information theory, who gathered for a 2013 workshop entitled, ‘Analysing vocal sequences in animals’. Our goal is to present not just a review of the state of the art, but to propose a methodological framework that summarises what we suggest are the best practices for research in this field, across taxa and across disciplines. We also provide a tutorial‐style introduction to some of the most promising algorithmic approaches for analysing sequences. We divide our review into three sections: identifying the distinct units of an acoustic sequence, describing the different ways that information can be contained within a sequence, and analysing the structure of that sequence. Each of these sections is further subdivided to address the key questions and approaches in that area. We propose a uniform, systematic, and comprehensive approach to studying sequences, with the goal of clarifying research terms used in different fields, and facilitating collaboration and comparative studies. Allowing greater interdisciplinary collaboration will facilitate the investigation of many important questions in the evolution of communication and sociality.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 2006

Contribution of spike timing to the information transmitted by HVC neurons

Chloé Huetz; Catherine Del Negro; Nicolas Lebas; Philippe Tarroux; Jean-Marc Edeline

In many species, neurons with highly selective stimulus‐response properties characterize higher order sensory areas and/or sensory motor areas of the CNS. In the songbird nuclei, the responses of HVC (used as a proper name) neurons during playback of the birds own song (BOS) are probably one of the most striking examples of selectivity for natural stimuli. We examined here to what extent spike‐timing carries information about natural and time‐reversed versions of the BOS. From a heterogenous population of 107 HVC neurons recorded in long‐day or short‐day conditions, a standard indicator of stimulus preference based on spike‐count (the d′ index) indicates that a limited proportion of cells can be classified as selective for the BOS (20% with a |d′| > 1). In contrast, quantifying the information conveyed by spike trains with the metric‐space of J.D. Victor & K.P Purpura [(1996) J. Neurophysiol., 76, 1310–1326] indicates that 62% of the cells display significant amounts of transmitted information, among which 77% are ‘temporal cells’. ‘Temporal cells’ correspond to cells transmitting significant amounts of information when spike‐timing is considered, whereas no information, or lower amounts of transmitted information, is obtained when only spike‐count is considered. Computing a correlation index between spike trains [S. Schreiber et al. (2003) Neurocomputing, 52–54,925–931] revealed that spike‐timing reliability is higher for the forward than for the reverse BOS, whatever the day length and the cell type are. Cells classified as selective in terms of spike‐counts (d′ index) had greater amounts of transmitted information, but cells classified as non‐selective (d′ < 0.5) can also transmit significant amounts of information. Thus, information theory methods demonstrate that a much larger proportion of neurons than expected based on spike‐count only participate in the discrimination between stimuli.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2013

Cortical Inhibition Reduces Information Redundancy at Presentation of Communication Sounds in the Primary Auditory Cortex

Quentin Gaucher; Chloé Huetz; Boris Gourévitch; Jean-Marc Edeline

In all sensory modalities, intracortical inhibition shapes the functional properties of cortical neurons but also influences the responses to natural stimuli. Studies performed in various species have revealed that auditory cortex neurons respond to conspecific vocalizations by temporal spike patterns displaying a high trial-to-trial reliability, which might result from precise timing between excitation and inhibition. Studying the guinea pig auditory cortex, we show that partial blockage of GABAA receptors by gabazine (GBZ) application (10 μm, a concentration that promotes expansion of cortical receptive fields) increased the evoked firing rate and the spike-timing reliability during presentation of communication sounds (conspecific and heterospecific vocalizations), whereas GABAB receptor antagonists [10 μm saclofen; 10–50 μm CGP55845 (p-3-aminopropyl-p-diethoxymethyl phosphoric acid)] had nonsignificant effects. Computing mutual information (MI) from the responses to vocalizations using either the evoked firing rate or the temporal spike patterns revealed that GBZ application increased the MI derived from the activity of single cortical site but did not change the MI derived from population activity. In addition, quantification of information redundancy showed that GBZ significantly increased redundancy at the population level. This result suggests that a potential role of intracortical inhibition is to reduce information redundancy during the processing of natural stimuli.


PLOS ONE | 2012

Differences between Spectro-Temporal Receptive Fields Derived from Artificial and Natural Stimuli in the Auditory Cortex

Jonathan Laudanski; Jean-Marc Edeline; Chloé Huetz

Spectro-temporal properties of auditory cortex neurons have been extensively studied with artificial sounds but it is still unclear whether they help in understanding neuronal responses to communication sounds. Here, we directly compared spectro-temporal receptive fields (STRFs) obtained from the same neurons using both artificial stimuli (dynamic moving ripples, DMRs) and natural stimuli (conspecific vocalizations) that were matched in terms of spectral content, average power and modulation spectrum. On a population of auditory cortex neurons exhibiting reliable tuning curves when tested with pure tones, significant STRFs were obtained for 62% of the cells with vocalizations and 68% with DMR. However, for many cells with significant vocalization-derived STRFs (STRFvoc) and DMR-derived STRFs (STRFdmr), the BF, latency, bandwidth and global STRFs shape differed more than what would be predicted by spiking responses simulated by a linear model based on a non-homogenous Poisson process. Moreover STRFvoc predicted neural responses to vocalizations more accurately than STRFdmr predicted neural response to DMRs, despite similar spike-timing reliability for both sets of stimuli. Cortical bursts, which potentially introduce nonlinearities in evoked responses, did not explain the differences between STRFvoc and STRFdmr. Altogether, these results suggest that the nonlinearity of auditory cortical responses makes it difficult to predict responses to communication sounds from STRFs computed from artificial stimuli.


Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience | 2014

Neural correlates of moderate hearing loss: time course of response changes in the primary auditory cortex of awake guinea-pigs.

Chloé Huetz; Maud Guedin; Jean-Marc Edeline

Over the last decade, the consequences of acoustic trauma on the functional properties of auditory cortex neurons have received growing attention. Changes in spontaneous and evoked activity, shifts of characteristic frequency (CF), and map reorganizations have extensively been described in anesthetized animals (e.g., Noreña and Eggermont, 2003, 2005). Here, we examined how the functional properties of cortical cells are modified after partial hearing loss in awake guinea pigs. Single unit activity was chronically recorded in awake, restrained, guinea pigs from 3 days before up to 15 days after an acoustic trauma induced by a 5 kHz 110 dB tone delivered for 1 h. Auditory brainstem responses (ABRs) audiograms indicated that these parameters produced a mean ABR threshold shift of 20 dB SPL at, and one octave above, the trauma frequency. When tested with pure tones, cortical cells showed on average a 25 dB increase in threshold at CF the day following the trauma. Over days, this increase progressively stabilized at only 10 dB above control value indicating a progressive recovery of cortical thresholds, probably reflecting a progressive shift from temporary threshold shift (TTS) to permanent threshold shift (PTS). There was an increase in response latency and in response variability the day following the trauma but these parameters returned to control values within 3 days. When tested with conspecific vocalizations, cortical neurons also displayed an increase in response latency and in response duration the day after the acoustic trauma, but there was no effect on the average firing rate elicited by the vocalization. These findings suggest that, in cases of moderate hearing loss, the temporal precision of neuronal responses to natural stimuli is impaired despite the fact the firing rate showed little or no changes.


Neuroembryology and Aging | 2004

From Receptive Field Dynamics to the Rate of Transmitted Information: Some Facets of the Thalamocortical Auditory System

Chloé Huetz; Jean-Marc Edeline

In this article, we first evaluate the literature describing reorganizations of auditory cortex topography after behavioral training. We then review the studies showing that receptive fields of auditory thalamocortical neurons express large dynamics in unanesthetized animals. During the time course of different behavioral training protocols, the frequency tuning curves of thalamocortical neurons can be selectively modified to code for the learned importance of acoustic stimuli. In other circumstances, when the vigilance state shifts from waking to sleep, the functional properties of thalamic and cortical neurons exhibit drastic modifications. Finally, we point out new lines of research. First, investigations describing the responses of neurons to communication signals (e.g. species-specific vocalizations) are important because they reveal how the thalamocortical auditory system processes biologically relevant sounds. Second, we suggest that the spike timing precision can largely increase the amount of information transmitted in the thalamocortical auditory system. This urges for more systematic studies in which the temporal organization of spike trains will be considered at presentation of natural stimuli.


Jaro-journal of The Association for Research in Otolaryngology | 2018

Robust Neuronal Discrimination in Primary Auditory Cortex Despite Degradations of Spectro-temporal Acoustic Details: Comparison Between Guinea Pigs with Normal Hearing and Mild Age-Related Hearing Loss

Yonane Aushana; Samira Souffi; Jean-Marc Edeline; Christian Lorenzi; Chloé Huetz

This study investigated to which extent the primary auditory cortex of young normal-hearing and mild hearing-impaired aged animals is able to maintain invariant representation of critical temporal-modulation features when sounds are submitted to degradations of fine spectro-temporal acoustic details. This was achieved by recording ensemble of cortical responses to conspecific vocalizations in guinea pigs with either normal hearing or mild age-related sensorineural hearing loss. The vocalizations were degraded using a tone vocoder. The neuronal responses and their discrimination capacities (estimated by mutual information) were analyzed at single recording and population levels. For normal-hearing animals, the neuronal responses decreased as a function of the number of the vocoder frequency bands, so did their discriminative capacities at the single recording level. However, small neuronal populations were found to be robust to the degradations induced by the vocoder. Similar robustness was obtained when broadband noise was added to exacerbate further the spectro-temporal distortions produced by the vocoder. A comparable pattern of robustness to degradations in fine spectro-temporal details was found for hearing-impaired animals. However, the latter showed an overall decrease in neuronal discrimination capacities between vocalizations in noisy conditions. Consistent with previous studies, these results demonstrate that the primary auditory cortex maintains robust neural representation of temporal envelope features for communication sounds under a large range of spectro-temporal degradations.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2008

Tonotopic Control of Auditory Thalamus Frequency Tuning by Reticular Thalamic Neurons

Nathalie Cotillon-Williams; Chloé Huetz; Elizabeth Hennevin; Jean-Marc Edeline

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N. Vibert

Paris Descartes University

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P. P. Vidal

Paris Descartes University

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C. de Waele

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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