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Dive into the research topics where Malcolm N. Semple is active.

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Featured researches published by Malcolm N. Semple.


European Journal of Neuroscience | 1999

Conditioned enhancement and suppression in the developing auditory midbrain

Sally K. Thornton; Malcolm N. Semple; Dan H. Sanes

Neural responses in the adult central auditory system to binaural stimuli can be altered by preceding acoustic events, including auditory motion. To determine whether the juvenile auditory system also exhibits this feature, we have examined interaural level difference (ILD) processing in the developing gerbil. A long binaural stimulus was followed without interruption by modulation of the level difference (virtual acoustic motion), which in turn was followed smoothly by a new steady state ILD. Auditory responses of single neurons in the inferior colliculus (IC) were assessed for sensitivity to the final steady state ILD. The response of EI neurons (excited by contralateral stimulation and inhibited ipsilaterally) was examined at postnatal (P) days 17–18, P24–25, and in adult animals. In adult animals, a sudden reduction of the inhibitory stimulus level resulted in a long‐lasting (median = 4.3 s) enhanced discharge rate (conditioned enhancement). In P17–18 animals, conditioned enhancement only lasted for 1.2 s. When the inhibitory stimulus level was suddenly increased, adult neurons often displayed a conditioned suppression of discharge rate (median = 4.5 s), whereas P17–18 neurons remained suppressed for a much briefer period (median = 1.2 s). Moreover, the difference between conditioned responses and control discharge rates was three–four times greater in adult neurons compared to those recorded in P17–25 animals.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2013

Effects of spectral and temporal disruption on cortical encoding of gerbil vocalizations

Maria Ter-Mikaelian; Malcolm N. Semple; Dan H. Sanes

Animal communication sounds contain spectrotemporal fluctuations that provide powerful cues for detection and discrimination. Human perception of speech is influenced both by spectral and temporal acoustic features but is most critically dependent on envelope information. To investigate the neural coding principles underlying the perception of communication sounds, we explored the effect of disrupting the spectral or temporal content of five different gerbil call types on neural responses in the awake gerbils primary auditory cortex (AI). The vocalizations were impoverished spectrally by reduction to 4 or 16 channels of band-passed noise. For this acoustic manipulation, an average firing rate of the neuron did not carry sufficient information to distinguish between call types. In contrast, the discharge patterns of individual AI neurons reliably categorized vocalizations composed of only four spectral bands with the appropriate natural token. The pooled responses of small populations of AI cells classified spectrally disrupted and natural calls with an accuracy that paralleled human performance on an analogous speech task. To assess whether discharge pattern was robust to temporal perturbations of an individual call, vocalizations were disrupted by time-reversing segments of variable duration. For this acoustic manipulation, cortical neurons were relatively insensitive to short reversal lengths. Consistent with human perception of speech, these results indicate that the stable representation of communication sounds in AI is more dependent on sensitivity to slow temporal envelopes than on spectral detail.


Hearing Research | 2017

Developmental hearing loss impedes auditory task learning and performance in gerbils

Gardiner von Trapp; Ishita Aloni; Stephen Young; Malcolm N. Semple; Dan H. Sanes

ABSTRACT The consequences of developmental hearing loss have been reported to include both sensory and cognitive deficits. To investigate these issues in a non‐human model, auditory learning and asymptotic psychometric performance were compared between normal hearing (NH) adult gerbils and those reared with conductive hearing loss (CHL). At postnatal day 10, before ear canal opening, gerbil pups underwent bilateral malleus removal to induce a permanent CHL. Both CHL and control animals were trained to approach a water spout upon presentation of a target (Go stimuli), and withhold for foils (Nogo stimuli). To assess the rate of task acquisition and asymptotic performance, animals were tested on an amplitude modulation (AM) rate discrimination task. Behavioral performance was calculated using a signal detection theory framework. Animals reared with developmental CHL displayed a slower rate of task acquisition for AM discrimination task. Slower acquisition was explained by an impaired ability to generalize to newly introduced stimuli, as compared to controls. Measurement of discrimination thresholds across consecutive testing blocks revealed that CHL animals required a greater number of testing sessions to reach asymptotic threshold values, as compared to controls. However, with sufficient training, CHL animals approached control performance. These results indicate that a sensory impediment can delay auditory learning, and increase the risk of poor performance on a temporal task. HIGHLIGHTSHearing loss leads to slower discrimination task acquisition.Hearing loss delays generalization of learned rule to new stimuli.Hearing loss impairs perceptual sensitivity on an auditory discrimination task.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2015

Diverse cortical codes for scene segmentation in primate auditory cortex

Brian J. Malone; Brian H. Scott; Malcolm N. Semple


Archive | 2015

Cats off Neurons in Awake - Primary Auditory Cortex on Comparison Between Offset and Onset Responses of

Sohei Chimoto; Masashi Sakai; JingYu Wang; Yu Sato; Biao Tian; Pawel Kusmierek; Josef P. Rauschecker; Bryan M. Krause; Matthew I. Banks; Brian J. Malone; Brian H. Scott; Malcolm N. Semple


Archive | 2015

Inferior Colliculus of the Guinea Pig Representation of Species-Specific Vocalizations in the

Josef Syka; Malgorzata M. Straka; Dillon Schendel; Hubert H. Lim; Maria Ter-Mikaelian; Malcolm N. Semple; Dan H. Sanes; Alan Stein; Alexander L. Green; Tipu Z. Aziz; Morten L. Kringelbach; Christine E. Parsons; Katherine S. Young; Morten Joensson; Elvira Brattico; Jonathan A. Hyam; Samuel Schmitz


Archive | 2015

nucleus neurons of the mouse Development of on-off spiking in superior paraolivary

Richard A. Felix; Katrin Vonderschen; Albert S. Berrebi; Brian J. Malone; Brian H. Scott; Malcolm N. Semple


Archive | 2015

Eptesicus fuscus Colliculus of the Big Brown Bat, Neural Tuning to Sound Duration in the Inferior

John H. Casseday; Ellen Covey; Brandon Aubie; Riziq Sayegh; Thane Fremouw; Paul A. Faure; Anan Li; David H. Gire; Thomas Bozza; Diego Restrepo; Sarah Wirtssohn; Bernhard Ronacher; Brian J. Malone; Brian H. Scott; Malcolm N. Semple


Archive | 2015

encoding of gerbil vocalizations Effects of spectral and temporal disruption on cortical

Malcolm N. Semple; Dan H. Sanes; Melissa L. Caras; Kamal Sen; Edwin W. Rubel; Eliot A. Brenowitz


Archive | 2015

Modulations in the Human Auditory Cortex Neural Representations of Complex Temporal

Jonathan Z. Simon; Sylvie Nozaradan; Younes Zerouali; Isabelle Peretz; André Mouraux; Brian J. Malone; Brian H. Scott; Malcolm N. Semple

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Brian H. Scott

Center for Neural Science

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Josef P. Rauschecker

Georgetown University Medical Center

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Anan Li

University of Colorado Denver

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Ben H. Bonham

University of California

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Benoit Godey

University of California

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