Definition
The spectrotemporal response field (STRF) of an auditory neuron is a time-frequency measure of the dynamic responses of an auditory neuron to impulsive energy delivered at various frequencies. As such, it gives simultaneously two types of information about the neuron. The first is its frequency tuning, or more specifically which frequencies excite the cell best and which inhibit it. The other is the nature of its temporal response, i.e., whether it is sustained in time or is rapidly adapting. This measure is linear and takes the stimulus spectrogram as its input and hence is often found to be useful in predicting responses of a neuron to unseen stimuli.
Detailed Description
The Value of the STRF
A key requirement in the study of sensory nervous systems is the ability to characterize effectively neuronal response selectivity. In the visual system, striving for this objective...
References
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Further Readings
Fritz JB, Elhilali M, Shamma S (2007) Adaptive changes in cortical receptive fields induced by attention to complex sounds. J Neurophysiol 98:2337–2346
Moller AR (1973) Statistical evaluation of the dynamic properties of cochlear nucleus units using stimuli modulated with pseudorandom noise. Brain Res 57:443–456
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Shamma, S. (2013). Spectro-Temporal Receptive Fields. In: Jaeger, D., Jung, R. (eds) Encyclopedia of Computational Neuroscience. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7320-6_437-1
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4614-7320-6_437-1
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