SYNAPTIC MECHANISM IN THE PRIMARY AUDITORY CORTEX (AI) UNDERLYING
VOICE-ONSET TIME (VOT) DEPENDENT CATEGORICAL PERCEPTION: RELEVANCE TO
LANGUAGE SPECIFIC LANGUAGE IMPAIRMENT (SLI)
Masashi Sakai
Department of Physiology, University of Yamanashi, Yamanashi 409-3898, Japan
Abstract:
Stimulus-locking discharges of the primary auditory cortex neurons (AI) are critically involved in
encoding temporal variance of acoustic signals in the milliseconds to tens-of-milliseconds frame,
which is necessary for voice-onset time (VOT) dependent categorical perception” (ex., /ba/-/pa/
distinction) (Sakai and Sato, 2011). Such fine-grained auditory processing has been considered as
one of the bottlenecks for development of verbal acuity: its deficit is often accompanied with specific language
impairment (SLI) (Tallal et al., 1993). SLI is diagnosed when a child's language does not develop normally and the
difficulties cannot be accounted for malformation of nervous system, hearing deficits, mental retardation, emotional
disturbance, etc. (Bishop, 1992). In USA, as much as 5-10 % of population below 6-7 years old is affected by SLI
(Tomblin et al., 1997). Currently no unequivocal evidence is available as to neural basis of SLI.
First, I introduce our physiology-based neuro-computational model which well captures synaptic mechanism of AI
stimulus-locking discharges (Sakai et al., 2009, Sakai, 2012). The model incorporates four post-synaptic potentials
(PSPs) in the AI neuron and short-term plasticity of thalamocortical synaptic connections. Then, I present results of
animal studies showing such pharmacological treatment as to modify GABAA-receptor-mediated IPSP, NMDAreceptor-
mediated EPSP and/or short-term plasticity specifically altered (1) stimulus-locking capacity of AI neurons and
(2) behaviorally-assessed perceptual capacity for /ba/-/pa/ discrimination in cats. These findings raise a possibility that
some CNS drugs, or environmental chemicals, heighten the risk of SLI.