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Dive into the research topics where Mitchell Steinschneider is active.

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Featured researches published by Mitchell Steinschneider.


The Journal of Comparative Neurology | 2000

Auditory cortex on the human posterior superior temporal gyrus

Matthew A. Howard; Igor O. Volkov; R. Mirsky; P. C. Garell; M. D. Noh; Mark A. Granner; Hanna Damasio; Mitchell Steinschneider; Richard A. Reale; J. E. Hind; John F. Brugge

The human superior temporal cortex plays a critical role in hearing, speech, and language, yet its functional organization is poorly understood. Evoked potentials (EPs) to auditory click‐train stimulation presented binaurally were recorded chronically from penetrating electrodes implanted in Heschls gyrus (HG), from pial‐surface electrodes placed on the lateral superior temporal gyrus (STG), or from both simultaneously, in awake humans undergoing surgery for medically intractable epilepsy. The distribution of averaged EPs was restricted to a relatively small area on the lateral surface of the posterior STG. In several cases, there were multiple foci of high amplitude EPs lying along this acoustically active portion of STG. EPs recorded simultaneously from HG and STG differed in their sensitivities to general anesthesia and to changes in rate of stimulus presentation. Results indicate that the acoustically active region on the STG is a separate auditory area, functionally distinct from the HG auditory field(s). We refer to this acoustically sensitive area of the STG as the posterior lateral superior temporal area (PLST). Electrical stimulation of HG resulted in short‐latency EPs in an area that overlaps PLST, indicating that PLST receives a corticocortical input, either directly or indirectly, from HG. These physiological findings are in accord with anatomic evidence in humans and in nonhuman primates that the superior temporal cortex contains multiple interconnected auditory areas. J. Comp. Neurol. 416:79–92, 2000.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 1998

Click train encoding in primary auditory cortex of the awake monkey: Evidence for two mechanisms subserving pitch perception

Mitchell Steinschneider; David H. Reser; Yonatan I. Fishman; Charles E. Schroeder; Joseph C. Arezzo

Multiunit activity (MUA) and current source density (CSD) patterns evoked by click trains are examined in primary auditory cortex (A1) of three awake monkeys. Temporal and spectral features of click trains are differentially encoded in A1. Encoding of temporal features occurs at rates of 100-200 Hz through phase-locked activity in the MUA and CSD, is independent of pulse polarity pattern, and occurs in high best frequency (BF) regions of A1. The upper limit of ensemble-wide phase-locking is about 400 Hz in the input to A1, as manifested in the cortical middle laminae CSD and MUA of thalamocortical fibers. In contrast, encoding of spectral features occurs in low BF regions, and resolves both the f0 and harmonics of the stimuli through local maxima of activity determined by the tonotopic organization of the recording sites. High-pass filtered click trains decrease spectral encoding in low BF regions without modifying phase-locked responses in high BF regions. These physiological responses parallel features of human pitch perception for click trains, and support the existence of two distinct physiological mechanisms involved in pitch perception: the first using resolved harmonic components and the second utilizing unresolved harmonics that is based on encoding stimulus waveform periodicity.


Electroencephalography and Clinical Neurophysiology | 1992

Cellular generators of the cortical auditory evoked potential initial component

Mitchell Steinschneider; Craig E. Tenke; Charles E. Schroeder; Daniel C. Javitt; G.V. Simpson; Joseph C. Arezzo; Herbert G. Vaughan

Cellular generators of the initial cortical auditory evoked potential (AEP) component were determined by analyzing laminar profiles of click-evoked AEPs, current source density, and multiple unit activity (MUA) in primary auditory cortex of awake monkeys. The initial AEP component is a surface-negative wave, N8, that peaks at 8-9 msec and inverts in polarity below lamina 4. N8 is generated by a lamina 4 current sink and a deeper current source. Simultaneous MUA is present from lower lamina 3 to the subjacent white matter. Findings indicate that thalamocortical afferents are a generator of N8 and support a role for lamina 4 stellate cells. Relationships to the human AEP are discussed.


Journal of Neurophysiology | 2009

Coding of Repetitive Transients by Auditory Cortex on Heschl's Gyrus

John F. Brugge; Kirill V. Nourski; Hiroyuki Oya; Richard A. Reale; Hiroto Kawasaki; Mitchell Steinschneider; Matthew A. Howard

The capacity of auditory cortex on Heschls gyrus (HG) to encode repetitive transients was studied in human patients undergoing surgical evaluation for medically intractable epilepsy. Multicontact depth electrodes were chronically implanted in gray matter of HG. Bilaterally presented stimuli were click trains varying in rate from 4 to 200 Hz. Averaged evoked potentials (AEPs) and event-related band power (ERBP), computed from responses at each of 14 recording sites, identified two auditory fields. A core field, which occupies posteromedial HG, was characterized by a robust polyphasic AEP on which could be superimposed a frequency following response (FFR). The FFR was prominent at click rates below approximately 50 Hz, decreased rapidly as click rate was increased, but could reliably be detected at click rates as high as 200 Hz. These data are strikingly similar to those obtained by others in the monkey under essentially the same stimulus conditions, indicating that mechanisms underlying temporal processing in the auditory core may be highly conserved across primate species. ERBP, which reflects increases or decreases of both phase-locked and non-phase-locked power within given frequency bands, showed stimulus-related increases in gamma band frequencies as high as 250 Hz. The AEPs recorded in a belt field anterolateral to the core were typically of low amplitude, showing little or no evidence of short-latency waves or an FFR, even at the lowest click rates used. The non-phase-locked component of the response extracted from the ERBP showed a robust, long-latency response occurring here in response to the highest click rates in the series.


Brain and Language | 1995

Physiologic Correlates of the Voice Onset Time Boundary in Primary Auditory Cortex (A1) of the Awake Monkey: Temporal Response Patterns

Mitchell Steinschneider; Charles E. Schroeder; J.C. Arezzo; Herbert G. Vaughan

Behavioral studies in animals support the view that categorical, phonetic phenomena are based upon specific response properties of the auditory system. This study investigated physiologic responses reflecting the phonetic parameter of voice onset time (VOT). We examined multiunit activity (MUA) in the primary auditory cortex (A1) of awake monkeys elicited by the consonant-vowel syllables /da/ and /ta/ that varied in VOT from 0 to 60 msec. Two temporal response patterns encode VOT. The first pattern contains responses time-locked to stimulus onset and to the onset of voicing. In 10 of 17 electrode penetrations that display this pattern, MUA reflects the VOT perceptual boundary by containing a prominent response to voicing onset only for /ta/ stimuli. The second pattern contains responses phase-locked to the periodic portion of the syllables. MUA exhibiting this temporal pattern does not display categorical-like properties. We conclude that specific temporal response patterns in A1 reflect the perceptual boundary for VOT and may represent a physiologic correlate for categorical perception of this phonetic parameter.


The Journal of Neuroscience | 2012

Searching for the Mismatch Negativity in Primary Auditory Cortex of the Awake Monkey: Deviance Detection or Stimulus Specific Adaptation?

Yonatan I. Fishman; Mitchell Steinschneider

The mismatch negativity (MMN) is a preattentive component of the auditory event-related potential that is elicited by a change in a repetitive acoustic pattern. While MMN has been extensively used in human electrophysiological studies of auditory processing, the neural mechanisms and brain regions underlying its generation remain unclear. We investigate possible homologs of the MMN in macaque primary auditory cortex (A1) using a frequency oddball paradigm in which rare “deviant” tones are randomly interspersed among frequent “standard” tones. Standards and deviants had frequencies equal to the best frequency (BF) of the recorded neural population or to a frequency that evoked a response half the amplitude of the BF response. Early and later field potentials, current source density components, multiunit activity, and induced high-gamma band responses were larger when elicited by deviants than by standards of the same frequency. Laminar analysis indicated that differences between deviant and standard responses were more prominent in later activity, thus suggesting cortical amplification of initial responses driven by thalamocortical inputs. However, unlike the human MMN, larger deviant responses were characterized by the enhancement of “obligatory” responses rather than the introduction of new components. Furthermore, a control condition wherein deviants were interspersed among many tones of variable frequency replicated the larger responses to deviants under the oddball condition. Results suggest that differential responses under the oddball condition in macaque A1 reflect stimulus-specific adaptation rather than deviance detection per se. We conclude that neural mechanisms of deviance detection likely reside in cortical areas outside of A1.


Journal of the Acoustical Society of America | 2003

Representation of the voice onset time (VOT) speech parameter in population responses within primary auditory cortex of the awake monkey.

Mitchell Steinschneider; Yonatan I. Fishman; Joseph C. Arezzo

Voice onset time (VOT) signifies the interval between consonant onset and the start of rhythmic vocal-cord vibrations. Differential perception of consonants such as /d/ and /t/ is categorical in American English, with the boundary generally lying at a VOT of 20-40 ms. This study tests whether previously identified response patterns that differentially reflect VOT are maintained in large-scale population activity within primary auditory cortex (A1) of the awake monkey. Multiunit activity and current source density patterns evoked by the syllables /da/ and /ta/ with variable VOTs are examined. Neural representation is determined by the tonotopic organization. Differential response patterns are restricted to lower best-frequency regions. Response peaks time-locked to both consonant and voicing onsets are observed for syllables with a 40- and 60-ms VOT, whereas syllables with a 0- and 20-ms VOT evoke a single response time-locked only to consonant onset. Duration of aspiration noise is represented in higher best-frequency regions. Representation of VOT and aspiration noise in discrete tonotopic areas of A1 suggest that integration of these phonetic cues occurs in secondary areas of auditory cortex. Findings are consistent with the evolving concept that complex stimuli are encoded by synchronized activity in large-scale neuronal ensembles.


Brain Research | 1980

Phase-locked cortical responses to a human speech sound and low-frequency tones in the monkey

Mitchell Steinschneider; Joseph C. Arezzo; Herbert G. Vaughan

Concurrent recordings of average evoked potentials (AEP) and multiple unit activity (MUA) in monkey primary cortex to the syllable/da/, low-frequency tones, and clicks were performed. The AEP in response to the syllable consisted of a periodic alternation superimposed upon slower phasic deflections. All components inverted across the superior temporal plane, indicating their auditory cortical origin. The periodic activity was phase-locked to the syllables fundamental frequency at a latency of approximately 11 msec. MUA displayed a similar pattern of periodic activity, but with a shorter interval between stimulus and response peaks. This phase-locked MUA occurred only at regions of AEP polarity inversion. Phase-locked activity was also observed in the cortical AEP to 100 and 250 Hz, but not to 500 Hz tonal stimulation. MUA phase-locked to the stimulus frequency only occurred at 100 Hz. Both the periodic and slow components of the AEP were volume-conducted to the dorsal cortical surface. This finding suggests the possibility that similar cortical responses to speech sounds can be recorded from the human scalp.


Cerebral Cortex | 2011

Intracranial Study of Speech-Elicited Activity on the Human Posterolateral Superior Temporal Gyrus

Mitchell Steinschneider; Kirill V. Nourski; Hiroto Kawasaki; Hiroyuki Oya; John F. Brugge; Matthew A. Howard

To clarify speech-elicited response patterns within auditory-responsive cortex of the posterolateral superior temporal (PLST) gyrus, time-frequency analyses of event-related band power in the high gamma frequency range (75-175 Hz) were performed on the electrocorticograms recorded from high-density subdural grid electrodes in 8 patients undergoing evaluation for medically intractable epilepsy. Stimuli were 6 stop consonant-vowel (CV) syllables that varied in their consonant place of articulation (POA) and voice onset time (VOT). Initial augmentation was maximal over several centimeters of PLST, lasted about 400 ms, and was often followed by suppression and a local outward expansion of activation. Maximal gamma power overlapped either the Nα or Pβ deflections of the average evoked potential (AEP). Correlations were observed between the relative magnitudes of gamma band responses elicited by unvoiced stop CV syllables (/pa/, /ka/, /ta/) and their corresponding voiced stop CV syllables (/ba/, /ga/, /da/), as well as by the VOT of the stimuli. VOT was also represented in the temporal patterns of the AEP. These findings, obtained in the passive awake state, indicate that PLST discriminates acoustic features associated with POA and VOT and serve as a benchmark upon which task-related speech activity can be compared.


Brain Research | 1995

Tonotopic organization of responses reflecting stop consonant place of articulation in primary auditory cortex (A1) of the monkey

Mitchell Steinschneider; David H. Reser; Charles E. Schroeder; Joseph C. Arezzo

Current source density and multiunit activity elicited by stop consonant-vowel syllables were examined in primary auditory cortex of an awake monkey. Relative amplitudes of the speech-evoked responses were determined by the onset spectra of the consonants and the tonotopic organization. This finding supports the psychoacoustic hypothesis that the onset spectra of stop consonants are important determinants for the discrimination of place of articulation.

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Yonatan I. Fishman

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Joseph C. Arezzo

Albert Einstein College of Medicine

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Matthew A. Howard

University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics

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