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Dive into the research topics where Daniel L. Rathbun is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel L. Rathbun.


Experimental Brain Research | 2005

Background sounds contribute to spectrotemporal plasticity in primary auditory cortex

Raluca Moucha; Pritesh K. Pandya; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard

The mammalian auditory system evolved to extract meaningful information from complex acoustic environments. Spectrotemporal selectivity of auditory neurons provides a potential mechanism to represent natural sounds. Experience-dependent plasticity mechanisms can remodel the spectrotemporal selectivity of neurons in primary auditory cortex (A1). Electrical stimulation of the cholinergic nucleus basalis (NB) enables plasticity in A1 that parallels natural learning and is specific to acoustic features associated with NB activity. In this study, we used NB stimulation to explore how cortical networks reorganize after experience with frequency-modulated (FM) sweeps, and how background stimuli contribute to spectrotemporal plasticity in rat auditory cortex. Pairing an 8–4 kHz FM sweep with NB stimulation 300 times per day for 20 days decreased tone thresholds, frequency selectivity, and response latency of A1 neurons in the region of the tonotopic map activated by the sound. In an attempt to modify neuronal response properties across all of A1 the same NB activation was paired in a second group of rats with five downward FM sweeps, each spanning a different octave. No changes in FM selectivity or receptive field (RF) structure were observed when the neural activation was distributed across the cortical surface. However, the addition of unpaired background sweeps of different rates or direction was sufficient to alter RF characteristics across the tonotopic map in a third group of rats. These results extend earlier observations that cortical neurons can develop stimulus specific plasticity and indicate that background conditions can strongly influence cortical plasticity


Audiology and Neuro-otology | 2001

Spectral features control temporal plasticity in auditory cortex

Michael P. Kilgard; Pritesh K. Pandya; Jessica Vazquez; Daniel L. Rathbun; Raluca Moucha

Cortical responses are adjusted and optimized throughout life to meet changing behavioral demands and to compensate for peripheral damage. The cholinergic nucleus basalis (NB) gates cortical plasticity and focuses learning on behaviorally meaningful stimuli. By systematically varying the acoustic parameters of the sound paired with NB activation, we have previously shown that tone frequency and amplitude modulation rate alter the topography and selectivity of frequency tuning in primary auditory cortex. This result suggests that network-level rules operate in the cortex to guide reorganization based on specific features of the sensory input associated with NB activity. This report summarizes recent evidence that temporal response properties of cortical neurons are influenced by the spectral characteristics of sounds associated with cholinergic modulation. For example, repeated pairing of a spectrally complex (ripple) stimulus decreased the minimum response latency for the ripple, but lengthened the minimum latency for tones. Pairing a rapid train of tones with NB activation only increased the maximum following rate of cortical neurons when the carrier frequency of each train was randomly varied. These results suggest that spectral and temporal parameters of acoustic experiences interact to shape spectrotemporal selectivity in the cortex. Additional experiments with more complex stimuli are needed to clarify how the cortex learns natural sounds such as speech.


Hearing Research | 2005

Asynchronous inputs alter excitability, spike timing, and topography in primary auditory cortex.

Pritesh K. Pandya; Raluca Moucha; Daniel L. Rathbun; Jessica Vazquez; Michael P. Kilgard

Correlation-based synaptic plasticity provides a potential cellular mechanism for learning and memory. Studies in the visual and somatosensory systems have shown that behavioral and surgical manipulation of sensory inputs leads to changes in cortical organization that are consistent with the operation of these learning rules. In this study, we examine how the organization of primary auditory cortex (A1) is altered by tones designed to decrease the average input correlation across the frequency map. After one month of separately pairing nucleus basalis stimulation with 2 and 14 kHz tones, a greater proportion of A1 neurons responded to frequencies below 2 kHz and above 14 kHz. Despite the expanded representation of these tones, cortical excitability was specifically reduced in the high and low frequency regions of A1, as evidenced by increased neural thresholds and decreased response strength. In contrast, in the frequency region between the two paired tones, driven rates were unaffected and spontaneous firing rate was increased. Neural response latencies were increased across the frequency map when nucleus basalis stimulation was associated with asynchronous activation of the high and low frequency regions of A1. This set of changes did not occur when pulsed noise bursts were paired with nucleus basalis stimulation. These results are consistent with earlier observations that sensory input statistics can shape cortical map organization and spike timing.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2008

Environmental Enrichment Increases Response Strength And Paired‐Pulse Depression Of Auditory Cortex Neurons

Cherie R. Percaccio; Autumn L. Pruette; Shilpa T. Mistry; Yeting H. Chen; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard

A wide variety of sensory gating impairments have been associated with autism. Abnormal brain development may alter patterns of interaction between the child and the environment and hinder the acquisition of critical language skills. After several months of therapy, autistic symptoms may subside as children advance to higher cognitive stages. This study modeled the physiological changes associated with therapy‐related gains in children by investigating enrichment‐induced plasticity in rat auditory cortex. Evoked potential response strength and paired‐pulse depression were enhanced by exposure to an enriched environment and degraded by exposure to a standard environment. While neither exercise nor social stimulation, specifically, resulted in any plasticity, rats that heard the enriched environment from a distance also exhibited enhanced responses. The degree of enrichment‐induced plasticity was not reduced by a substantial and persistent cholinergic deficit. The finding that enrichment increases response ...


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2004

Environmental Enrichment Improves Response Strength, Threshold, Selectivity, and Latency of Auditory Cortex Neurons

Cherie R. Percaccio; Pritesh K. Pandya; Raluca Moucha; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2005

Environmental Enrichment Increases Paired-Pulse Depression in Rat Auditory Cortex

Cherie R. Percaccio; Autumn L. Pruette; Pritesh K. Pandya; Raluca Moucha; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard


Cerebral Cortex | 2008

Spectral and Temporal Processing in Rat Posterior Auditory Cortex

Pritesh K. Pandya; Daniel L. Rathbun; Raluca Moucha; Michael P. Kilgard


Archive | 2001

Background stimuli contribute to cortical plasticity in rat primary auditory cortex

Raluca Moucha; Pritesh K. Pandya; Juan Luis Vazquez; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard


Archive | 2001

Auditory experience improves response characteristics in rat primary auditory cortex neurons

Pritesh K. Pandya; Juan Luis Vazquez; Daniel L. Rathbun; Raluca Moucha; Michael P. Kilgard


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2006

Erratum: Environmental enrichment increases paired-pulse depression in rat auditory cortex (Journal of Neurophysiology (November 2005) 94, (3590-3600) DOI: 10.1152/jn.00433.2005)

Cherie R. Percaccio; Autumn L. Pruette; Pritesh K. Pandya; Raluca Moucha; Daniel L. Rathbun; Michael P. Kilgard

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Michael P. Kilgard

University of Texas at Dallas

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Pritesh K. Pandya

University of Texas at Dallas

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Raluca Moucha

University of Texas at Dallas

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Cherie R. Percaccio

University of Texas at Dallas

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Autumn L. Pruette

University of Texas at Dallas

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Jessica Vazquez

University of Texas at Dallas

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Shilpa T. Mistry

University of Texas at Dallas

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Yeting H. Chen

University of Texas at Dallas

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