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Active TRAINING, INDIVIDUAL NIH (US)

Cortical and subcortical dynamics in the central auditory system across learning and overtraining

$489.7K USD

Funder NATIONAL INSTITUTE ON DEAFNESS AND OTHER COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
Recipient Organization Johns Hopkins University
Country United States
Start Date Aug 16, 2024
End Date Dec 14, 2027
Duration 1,215 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10998291
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY As animals interact with their environment, they build and accrue sound associations with behaviorally relevant outcomes. The mammalian auditory system can be modified by experience and by behavioral context and supports the ability to build these associations. The auditory cortex (AC) supports the ability for animals to

learn that particular sounds can signal rewards. The neural responses in the primary auditory cortex (A1) can be re-shaped by audiomotor learning, taking the form of changes at the single-neuron and population level. This learning-induced plasticity decreases after animals are trained at expert levels of behavioral performance

for several weeks until the cortical map appears to renormalize and neural responses revert to a near pre- learning state. The plasticity that emerges across learning is not preserved in the cortex during the overtraining phase, yet animals are able to retain task performance. The overall objective of this proposal is to if A1 tutors

or offloads these combined representations of sound and action to another pathway for long-term use, which supports long term execution of the task and the renormalization of A1. Our central hypothesis is that the A1 tutors subcortical auditory regions—the medial geniculate body (MGB) and the inferior colliculus (IC)—

which subsequently store audiomotor associations. I will address this question in two aims. In Aim 1, I will determine the spatiotemporal dynamics of plasticity in the IC, MGB, and AC across learning and overtraining. In Aim 2, I will identify the causal contributions of the MGB and the IC at the expert level. To do this, I will train

mice on an auditory go/no-go task where mice learn to lick to a pure tone for a water reward (S+) and withhold licking to another tone (S-) to avoid a timeout. We use large-scale, two-photon mesoscopic imaging to monitor neural activity in IC neurons, MGB axons, and A1 neurons over the entire course of learning and overtraining

(28 days). I developed a new surgical preparation which allows the implantation of a single cranial window over the IC and the AC to enable simultaneous calcium imaging of both regions and the feedforward projections from the MGB to the AC. By tracking the same cell bodies and axons across a month of training, we examine

the sequence of stimulus-related and non-stimulus related plasticity and the nature of how learning and overtraining impact these processes across the sensory hierarchy. Using a combination of state-of-the-art optical tools, temporally precise optogenetics, large-scale calcium imaging, and custom computational

analyses and tools, these experiments will help us understand the nature of cortical-subcortical interactions that support auditory learning and memory consolidation along three processing stations in the central auditory system.

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Johns Hopkins University

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