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Local field potentials (LFPs) recorded in the auditory cortex of mammals are known to reveal weakly selective and often multimodal spectrotemporal receptive fields in contrast to spiking activity. This may in part reflect the wider "listening sphere" of LFPs relative to spikes due to the greater current spread at low than high frequencies. We recorded LFPs and spikes from auditory cortex of guinea pigs using 16-channel electrode arrays. LFPs were processed by a component analysis technique that produces optimally tuned linear combinations of electrode signals. Linear combinations of LFPs were found to have sharply tuned responses, closer to spike-related tuning. The existence of a sharply tuned component implies that a cortical neuron (or group of neurons) capable of forming a linear combination of its inputs has access to that information. Linear combinations of signals from electrode arrays reveal information latent in the subspace spanned by multichannel LFP recordings and are justified by the fact that the observations themselves are linear combinations of neural sources.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1152/jn.00040.2012

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2013-01-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

109

Pages

261 - 272

Total pages

11

Keywords

Action Potentials, Animals, Auditory Cortex, Auditory Perception, Guinea Pigs, Neurons, Principal Component Analysis