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1.
Summary Gnathonemus petersii discriminates between ohmic and capacitive objects. To investigate the sensory basis of this discrimination we recorded from primary afférents that innervate either A or B mormyromast sensory cells. Modified and natural electric organ discharges were used as stimuli. In both A and B fibres frequencies below the peak-power frequency (3.8 to 4.5 kHz) of the electric organ discharge caused minimal first-spike latencies and a maximum number of spikes. A fibres did not discriminate phase-shifted stimuli, whereas B fibres responded significantly with a decrease in first-spike latency if the phase shift was only — 1°. In both A and B fibres an amplitude increase caused a decrease in spike latency and an increase in spike number; an amplitude decrease had the reverse effect. If stimulated with quasi-natural electric organ discharges distorted by capacitive objects, the responses of A fibres decreased with increasing signal distortion. In contrast, the responses of B fibres increased until amplitude effects began to dominate. Gnathonemus may use the physiological differences between A and B fibres to detect and discriminate between capacitive and purely ohmic objects.Abbreviations ELL electrosensory lateral line lobe - EOD electric organ discharge - LFS local filtered signal - p-p peak-to-peak  相似文献   

2.
Weakly electric fish can detect nearby objects and analyse their electric properties during active electrolocation. Four individuals of the South American gymnotiform fish Eigenmannia sp., which emits a continuous wave-type electric signal, were tested for their ability to detect capacitive properties of objects and discriminate them from resistive properties. For individual fish, capacitive values of objects had to be greater than 0.22–1.7 nF (`lower threshold') and smaller than 120–680 nF (`upper threshold') in order to be detected. The capacitive values of natural objects fall well within this detection range. All fish trained could discriminate unequivocally between capacitive and resistive object properties. Thus, fish perceive capacitive properties as a separate object quality. The effects of different types of objects on the locally occurring electric signals which stimulate electroreceptors during electrolocation were examined. Purely resistive objects altered mainly local electric organ discharge (EOD) amplitude, but capacitive objects with values between about 0.5 and 600 nF changed the timing of certain EOD parameters (phase-shift) and EOD waveform. A mechanism for capacitance detection in wave-type electric fish based on time measurements is proposed and compared with the capacitance detection mechanism in mormyrid pulse-type fish, which is based on waveform measurements. Accepted: 31 July 1997  相似文献   

3.
Mormyrid fish (Gnathonemus petersii) can discriminate between ohmic and capacitive electrical objects during active electrolocation. The neural basis of this ability was investigated by recording cells in the dorsolateraland medial zones of the electrosensory lobe. Natural electric organ discharges (EODs) distorted by capacitive objects and EODs with computer generated phase shifts were used as stimuli.Cells in the dorsolateral zone were very sensitive to phase shifted EODs with constant amplitude spectra. Phase shifts as small as 1 were effective. Cells in this zone also responded more to EODs with capacitance induced distortions than to non-distorted EODs. These effects were very similar to the effects on B-type primary afferents from mormyromast electroreceptors which project to this zone.Cells in the medial zone were not sensitive to phase shifted EODs. Capacitance induced waveform distortions were effective, but the effect of such distortions was opposite to the effect on dorsolateral zone cells. These effects were very similar to the effects on A-type primary afferents from mormyromast electroreceptors which project to this zone.The results show that peripheral information about capacitive objects is preserved in the electrosensory lobe, but do not indicate any further processing of capacitive information in the lobe.  相似文献   

4.
Summary Plasticity in the frequency of the electric organ discharge (EOD) and electroreceptor tuning of weakly electric fish was studied in the genusApteronotus. Both hormone-induced and maturational changes in EOD frequency and electroreceptor tuning were examined.Apteronotus is different from all other steroid-responsive weakly electric fish in that estradiol-17, rather than androgens, induces discharge frequency decreases. This result can account for the reversed discharge frequency dimorphism found inApteronotus in which, counter to all other known sexually dimorphic electric fish, females have lower discharge frequencies than males. Studies of electroreceptor tuning inApteronotus indicate that electroreceptors are closely tuned to the frequency of the EOD. This finding was noted not only in adult animals, but also in juvenile animals shortly after the onset of their EODs. Tuning plasticity inApteronotus, as in other species studied, is associated with altered EOD frequencies and was noted in both maturational EOD changes and in estrogen-induced changes. Thus, tuning plasticity appears to be a general phenomenon which occurs concurrent with a variety of EOD changes.  相似文献   

5.
6.
Weakly electric fish orient at night by employing active electrolocation. South American and African species emit electric signals and perceive the consequences of these emissions with epidermal electroreceptors. Objects are detected by analyzing the electric images which they project onto the animal’s electroreceptive skin surface. Electric images depend on size, distance, shape, and material of objects and on the morphology of the electric organ and the fish’s body. It is proposed that the mormyrid Gnathonemus petersii possesses two electroreceptive “foveae” at its Schnauzenorgan and its nasal region, both of which resemble the visual fovea in the retina of many animals in design, function, and behavioral use. Behavioral experiments have shown that G. petersii can determine the resistive and capacitive components of an object’s complex impedance in order to identify prey items during foraging. In addition, fish can measure the distance and three-dimensional shape of objects. In order to determine object properties during active electrolocation, the fish have to determine at least four parameters of the local signal within an object’s electric image: peak amplitude, maximal slope, image width, and waveform distortions. A crucial parameter is the object distance, which is essential for unambiguous evaluation of object properties.  相似文献   

7.
Summary Three weakly electric fish (Gnathonemus petersii) were force-choice trained in a two-alternative procedure to discriminate between objects differing in their electrical characteristics. The objects were carbon dipoles in plexiglass tubing (length 2.5 cm, diameter 0.6 cm). Their electrical characteristics could be changed by varying the impedance of an external circuit to which they were connected (Fig. 1). In one (the capacitance dipole) the resistance was very low(< 3 ) and the capcitance variable. In the other (the resistance dipole) the resistance was variable and the capacitance low (<50 pF).Capacitances from several hundred pF (lower thresholds, Fig. 2) to several hundred nF (upper thresholds, Fig. 3) could be discriminated from both insulators and good conductors. In all cases the reward-negative stimulus was the capacitance dipole, which was avoided by all fish spontaneously. Thresholds were defined at 70% correct choices.The fish were then tested for their ability to discriminate between one object with a given capacitance and another with resistances varying from 3 to 200 k. The capacitance dipole continued to be the negative stimulus throughout. All 3 fish avoided it in at least 80% of the trials at each stimulus combination (Fig. 4). This result suggests that Gnathonemus perceives the capacitance and the resistance of objects differentially.The effect of the dipole-objects as well as some natural objects on the local EOD was recorded differentially very close to the fish's skin (Fig. 5). The amplitude of the local EODs was affected by all types of objects as they approached the skin. However, the waveform was changed only by capacitance dipoles and some natural objects (Figs. 6 and 7). It appears that the fish perceive not only intensity changes in the local EOD but wave-form deformations as well and can thus distinguish objects of different complex impedances.Abbreviations EOD electric organ discharge - f max maximal spectral frequency - GP Gnathonemus petersii - LFS local filtered signal - PMA probing motor act - S+ positive stimulus - S negative stimulus  相似文献   

8.
Electroreceptive afferents from A- and B-electroreceptor cells of mormyromasts and Knollenorgans were tested for their sensitivity to different stimulus waveforms in the weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii. Both A- and B-mormyromast cells had their lowest sensitivity to a waveform similar to the self-generated electric organ discharge (EOD) (around 0° phase-shift). Highest sensitivities, i.e. lowest response thresholds, in both A- and B-cells were measured at phase shifts of +135°. Thus, both cell types were inversely waveform tuned. The sensitivity of B-cells increased sharply with increasing waveform distortions. Their tuning curves had a sharp minimum of sensitivity at +7° phase shift. A-cells had a much broader waveform tuning with a plateau level of low sensitivity from +24° to −15°. Across a 360° cycle of phase-shifts, the range of thresholds was 16 dB for individual B-cells and 4.5 dB for individual A-cells. Knollenorgan afferents were tuned to 0° phase-shifted EODs and had a dynamic range of 12 dB. Lowest sensitivities were measured at a phase shift of +165°. Experiments with computer-generated stimuli revealed that the strong sensitivity of mormyromast B-cells of EOD waveform distortions cannot be attributed to any of the seven waveform parameters tested. In addition, EOD stimuli must have the correct duration for B-cells to respond to waveform distortions. Thus, waveform tuning appears to be based on the specific combination of several waveform parameters that occur only with natural EODs. Accepted: 28 April 1997  相似文献   

9.
The weakly electric fish Gnathonemus petersii detects, localizes, and analyzes objects during active electrolocation even in complete darkness. This enables these fish to lead a nocturnal life and find and identify their prey (small insect larvae) on the ground of their freshwater habitat. During active electrolocation, fish produce a series of brief electric signals, electric organ discharges (EOD), with an electric organ in their tail. Each EOD builds up a stable electric field around the fish, which is distorted only by nearby objects. Field distortions lead to changes of the transepidermal electric current flow at a region of the fish's electroreceptive skin surface called the 'electric image'. Within the electric image, locally perceived EODs can be either altered in amplitude or waveform by an object. Fish measure both parameters to assess object properties, such as the capacitive and resistive components of the object's complex impedance. the object's size and shape, and its distance from the fish. None of these object properties can be evaluated in isolation, but have to be inferred during parallel processing of electric image spatial and qualitative parameters. Two anterior skin regions of G. petersii appear to possess particular properties for special electrolocation tasks and we therefore refer to them as 'foveal' regions. Because of its high electroreceptor density, the electric field geometry around it, and its behavioral use, the 'nasal region' between the nares and the mouth at the head of the fish is suggested to be a fovea for long-range guidance and object detection. We propose that the 'Schnauzenorgan', a long and flexible chin appendix covered densely with electroreceptor organs, is a second electroreceptive fovea associated with a short-range (food) identification system. Together, these two electric foveae constitute an effective prey detection and identification system.  相似文献   

10.
Weakly electric fish react to resistance and capacitance of objects that locally amplify and distort their self-generated Electric Organ Discharge (EOD) received by their skin receptors. The successive-layer structure of tissues gives certain biological materials a kind of electrical anisotropy. A polarized object, for instance, will conduct current differently in one versus the other direction. This diode-like electric anisotropy should make a significant difference to a Mormyrid who emits a directional, biphasic EOD and whose receptors are sensitive to EOD amplitude and distortion changes. The ability of Gnathonemus petersii (Mormyridae) to discriminate polarity was investigated on a virtual object by manipulating changes in a circuit comprised of diodes combined in various ways. The “novelty response,” an increase in the discharge rate in response to perceived changes, was used to assess the fish’s sensitivity. Indeed, G. petersii detects polarized objects and discriminates between polarity directions. However, the diode-like anisotropy entails a voltage threshold. Because voltage decreases with distance, and the EOD comprises opposite phases of different amplitudes, the active spaces of detection and discrimination are different and depend on the object orientation. Electric polarity thus extends the “palette” of dielectric properties used by this fish to evaluate object quality, direction, and distance.  相似文献   

11.
Summary Members of the family of African electric fish, Mormyridae, exhibit a novelty response, consisting of an acceleration in the rate of electric organ discharges (EODs), when faced with changes in feedback arising from their EODs. In this study, the novelty responses of three different species of mormyrids to shunts with different electrical characteristics were noted. The three species differed in the frequency contents of their EODs: two species had relatively high spectral frequencies in their EODs (>10 kHz), while the third species had only lower spectral frequencies (< 10 kHz). Primarily resistive shunts elicited novelty response accelerations in all three species, and the magnitudes of these responses, when normalized to the responses obtained for a shunt with no introduced resistance, were comparable for all three species. For primarily capacitive shunts, however, the magnitudes of the normalized responses were different for the three species: the two species with high spectral frequencies in their EODs showed larger normalized responses than the third species which had only low EOD spectral frequencies.The differences in species responses for capacitive shunts, and the similarities in species responses for resistive shunts, suggest that electric fish detect the complex impedance of objects in their near field environment: a circuit model consisting of a fish emitting discharges into the surrounding water, which can be shunted by a variable complex impedance, conforms well to the data. Thus, electrolocation is a frequency dependent sensory process, and this frequency dependency should be considered in any speculation about the adaptive value of different EOD waveforms.Abbreviation EOD electric organ discharge  相似文献   

12.
Summary Field studies have demonstrated that several species of mormyrid fish from Gabon, West Africa have a sex difference in the pulse-like waveform of their Electric Organ Discharge (EOD). Administration of androgen hormones (testosterone or dihydrotestosterone) to a female or juvenile can induce the EOD typical of a sexually mature male. Data for two such species —Brienomyrus brachyistius (triphasic) andStomatorhinus corneti — are presented, showing that transformation of a female's or juvenile's EOD to a male-like EOD involves a 2–3 fold increase in EOD duration and a downward shift in the peak frequency of the EOD's power spectrum (as determined by Fourier analysis). ForBrienomyrus brachyistius (triphasic), estradiol can also induce changes in the EOD waveform, although not as dramatic as that for androgens. Changes in EOD duration and power spectra are often accompanied by an alteration of the wave-shape or morphology of the EOD pulse, i.e., the relative amplitude of its peaks and the presence of inflection points in its negative and positive phases.A third species,Hippopotamyrus batesii (triphasic), not previously known to have an EOD sex difference, also responds to testosterone treatment with an increase in EOD duration. Preliminary field data indicate this species may have a sexual dimorphism in its EOD, suggesting that the response to a steroid hormone may be an indicator of a sex difference in a species' EOD waveform. Such findings are discussed in relation to the affects of steroids on vertebrate neurons and muscle, and the evolution of electric communication systems.Abbreviations DHT 5-dihydrotestosterone - EOD electric organ discharge - F mature female - HTI interval between peaks (H and T) in EOD's first derivative - IF juvenile female - IM juvenile male - M mature male - PPW peak frequency of power spectrum  相似文献   

13.
14.
Fish of the family Mormyridae emit weak, pulse-like electric organ discharges (EODs). The discharge rhythm is variable, but the waveform of the EOD is constant for each fish, with species- and individual characteristics. The ability of Pollimyrus isidori and Gnathonemus petersii (Mormyridae) to discriminate between different EOD waveforms was tested using a differential conditioning procedure. Fish were first trained to respond to a reference signal in swimming to a dish to receive a bloodworm (food reward). The reference signal consisted of a 10-Hz train of the digitally recorded EOD of a conspecific. Second, an alternative signal (10-Hz train of a different EOD, either from another species, or from a conspecific of the other sex) was associated with air bubbles as punishment. The two signals were played at successive trials in random order. On each trial the latency was measured between the onset of the signal and the response. 7 out of the 8 P. isidori tested and both of the two G. petersii tested associated the reference EOD with food. Among these, five P. isidori and two G. petersii responded differentially (p < 0.01) to EODs of different species. P. isidori similarly discriminated between conspecific EODs of different sexes. The quantity of different alternative EODs which could be tested was limited when fish eventually habituated to the punishment. Even when the amplitude of the EODs was randomly changed at each trial, two out of two G. petersii differentiated between EODs of the two species, and three out of three P. isidori tested differentiated between EODs within their own species. Response latencies to the rewarded signal during the basic training and during discrimination (when it had to be distinguished from the S-) were similar. G. petersii showed differential responses for S+ and S- also in the rhythm of discharge exhibited during playback, after five EOD pulses for one fish, and after a single pulse for the other. Mormyrids may therefore distinguish between conspecifics and members of other species, and even between individual conspecifics, by their EOD waveform.  相似文献   

15.
Summary Three species of Gymnotid fish, two species ofHypopomus andRhamphichthys rostratus, each having pulse type electric organ discharges (EOD) of different durations were studied to learn if any correlation exists between the spectral composition of the species specific EOD pulse and the frequency response characteristics of that species' electroreceptors. The receptor population consisted of two major categories (examples in Fig. 3). One category, termed pulse marker receptors, responded to suprathreshold stimulus pulses with a single spike at a short (<2 ms) latency. These receptors were tuned to the higher frequency components of a species' EOD (Fig. 4A) and were always 5 to 10 dB less sensitive than any other electroreceptors within a given species. The second major receptor category, burst duration coders, responded to an electrical stimulus with a burst of spikes at a longer latency, burst length was a function of stimulus amplitude. This second category could be further divided into three sub-categories according to the receptors' frequency response characteristics. The most commonly seen subcategory, wide band receptors (Fig. 4B), responded best to stimuli having frequencies equal to the dominant frequency component of the species' EOD in the two species ofHypopomus studied. A second subcategory, narrow band receptors (Fig. 4 A), had frequency response characteristics similar to those of the pulse marker receptors; however, these had thresholds 10 dB lower than those of the pulse marker. The third subcategory of burst duration coders, low frequency receptors (Fig. 4 C, D), responded best to stimulus frequencies ranging from about 50 to 150 Hz. Mechanisms of coding stimulus amplitude and responses to prolonged sinusoidal electrical stimuli were also studied in the various receptor types.It is suggested that the differences in the major receptor types and the different frequency response characteristics of the electroreceptors within a given species allows the animals to identify and evaluate signals resulting from their own EOD, the EODs of conspecifics and electrical stimuli generated by other species of electric fish.Supported by NIH Grant #1 RO1 NS 12337-01  相似文献   

16.
  1. Discharges of the electric organ (EODs) of the weakly electric fishes Gymnotus carapo and Gnathonemus petersii produce alternative electric fields in the surrounding water. Equipotential contures are plotted in order to know the electric field in detail and to mimic it with a dipol model.
  2. Either fields are deformed in a characteristic manner by conducting and nonconducting objects. These field distortions, opposite for conductors and nonconductors were measured by using several methods:
    1. Comparisons of undistorted and distorted field patterns issue variable distortions shapes depending on the objects' placement.
    2. Direct measurements of field distortions at a “receptor site” were made by several sets of electrodes.
    The effects measured depend on the conductivity of objects, their size and their distance from the electrical dipole the last being due to the inhomogenous field contures. As a general rule, plastic objects make the field increase, and metal objects decrease. However, considering all positions, either material produces complex field variations (di- and polyphasic curves).
  3. Since responses of gymnotids' primary fibers as a function of plates' position strikingly fit to the curves of field distortion, the electroreceptors use obviously quite similar measurement conditions as the field registration arrangements. This evidence is discussed and compared with more general aspects of field distortions in homogenous fields.
  4. The field effects decrease exponentially with the lateral distance of objects to the dipole. However, the reaction of primary fibers decreases rather linearly as the lateral distance of objects is increased.
  5. Experiments with systematically changed stimulus frequency showed primary fibers to be exited over a much wider range of frequencies (0–1000 cps at least) than to be expected regarding the usual EOD discharge rate of 30–100 cps. However, the peak of the “tuning curve” at best frequency fits well into this range. On the other hand, the change of response over this frequency range is 10–20%, so that there is but minor improvement of the information by an increase of EOD frequency.
  相似文献   

17.
Summary The mormyrid fish of Africa produce a weak electric pulse called an Electric Organ Discharge (EOD) that functions in electrical guidance and communication. TheEOD waveform describes the appearance of a single pulse which is produced by the electric organ's excitable cells, the electrocytes. For some species, there is a sex difference in the appearance and duration of the EOD waveform, which is under the control of gonadal steroid hormones. We now show, using biochemical techniques, that the steroid-sensitivity of the myogenic electric organ correlates with the presence of comparatively high levels of androgen-binding activity in the cytosol of electrocytes.TheEOD rhythm describes the rate at which the electric organ fires and is under the control of a central electromotor pathway. Sex differences have also been described for the EOD rhythm. Using steroid autoradiographic techniques, we found uptake of tritium-labelled dihydrotestosterone (3H-DHT) by cells within the reticular formation that lie adjacent to the medullary relay nucleus which innervates the spinal electromotoneurons that excite the electric organ. However, no DHT-binding was observed in the relay or electromotor nuclei.Steroid-concentrating cells were also found in several other brainstem regions, the hypothalamus, and the thalamus. In particular, a group of DHT-concentrating, motoneuron-like cells were observed in the caudal medulla and were identified as aswimbladder orsonic motor nucleus.The biochemical data suggest that the electric organ has evolved a sensitivity to gonadal steroid hormones that may underlie the development of known sex differences in the EOD waveform. The autoradiographic results suggest that if steroids do affect the development of sex differences in the EOD rhythm, it is at some level removed from known spinal and medullary electromotor nuclei.Abbreviations ac anterior commissure - AD area dorsalis telencephali - AV area ventralis telencephali - CBL cerebellum - DT dorsal thalamus - E electromotoneuron - En entopeduncular nucleus,ef lateral line efferent nucleus - EG eminentia granularis - ELLL electroreceptive lateral line lobe,EO electric organ,FV folded part of valvula of cerebellum - H hypothalamus - M mesencephalon - MO medulla oblongota - OB olfactory bulb - OT optic tectum - PO preoptic area - R medullary relay nucleus - rf reticular formation - SC spinal cord - SMN sonic motor nucleus - T telencephalon - TP posterior tuber of diencephalon - TS torus semicircularis - UV unfolded part of valvula of cerebellum,v ventricle - VT ventral thalamus  相似文献   

18.
Summary Hypopomus occidentalis is a weakly electric Gymnotiform fish with a pulse-type electric organ discharge (EOD).Hypopomus used in this study were taken from one of the northernmost boundaries of this species, the Atlantic drainage of Panama where the animals breed at the beginning of the dry season (December). In normal breeding populations,Hypopomus occidentalis exhibit a sexual dimorphism in EOD and morphology. Mature males are large with a broad tail and have an EOD characterized by a low peak power frequency. Females and immature males are smaller, having a slender tail and EODs with higher peak power frequencies (Fig. 1). This study describes differences in the EOD and electric organ morphology between breeding field populations of male and femaleHypopomus. Changes in physiology, morphology and EOD shape which may accompany this seasonal change were examined in steroid injected fish, using standard histological and physiological techniques.A group of females were injected with hormones (5-dihydrotestosterone (DHT), estrogen or saline) to assess changes in their morphology and EOD. Animals treated with DHT developed characteristics which mimicked the sexually dimorphic characteristics of a male, while the other groups did not (see Fig. 5). Tissue from the tails of breeding males and females, and females treated with DHT, were sampled to measure the size of the electrocytes in the tail. The broader tail of males and DHT-females is composed of large electrocytes, whereas the slender tail of normal females is composed of smaller electrocytes. Therefore, the increase in the tail width in the female DHT group is caused by an enlargement of the electrocytes in this area.Intracellular recordings from the electrocytes of saline and DHT injected females show a difference in the responses of the rostral faces of the electrocytes from the two groups, which reflect the differences in their EODs. Saline-treated animals had symmetrical EODs (the first and second phase of the EOD were equal in duration and amplitude), while the physiological responses from each face of the electrocytes yielded responses that were similarly equal in duration and amplitude. DHT-treated animals had asymmetrical EODs (the first phase of the EOD was similar to that of saline treated fish and larger in amplitude and shorter in duration than the second phase) and the physiological responses of the electrocytes reflected this asymmetry. The differential recordings across the caudal face were similar to those from saline treated fish, while the responses from the rostral face were longer in duration and smaller in amplitude.These data suggest that the effects of androgens underlie the changes in single electrocytes which produce the sexually dimorphic signals and morphology present in natural breeding populations ofHypopomus occidentalis.  相似文献   

19.
There is a sexual dimorphism in the frequency of the quasi-sinusoidal electric organ discharge (EOD) of Sternopygus macrurus, with males, on average, an octave lower. EODs are detected by tuberous electroreceptor organs, which exhibit V-shaped frequency tuning with maximal sensitivity near the fish's own EOD frequency. This would seem to limit the ability of a fish to detect the EODs of opposite-sex conspecifics. However, electroreceptor tuning has always been based on single-frequency stimulation, while actual EOD detection involves the addition of a conspecific EOD to the fish's own. In the present study, recordings were made from single electroreceptive units while the fish were stimulated with pairs of sine waves: one (S1) representing the fish's own EOD added to a second (S2) representing a conspecific EOD. T unit response was easily predicted by assuming that the electroreceptor acts as a linear filter in series with a threshold-sensitive spike initiator. P unit response was more complex, and unexpectedly high sensitivity was found for frequencies of S2 well displaced from the fish's EOD frequency. For both P and T units, detection thresholds for S2 were much lower when added to S1, than when presented alone.  相似文献   

20.
Mormryid electric fish (Gnathonemus petersii) respond to novel stimuli with an increase in the rate of the electric organ discharge (EOD). These novelty responses were used to measure the fish's ability to detect small changes in the amplitude and latency of an electrosensory stimulus. Responses were evoked in curarized fish in which the EOD was blocked but in which the EOD motor command continued to be emitted. An artificial EOD was provided to the fish at latencies of 2.4 to 14.4 ms following the EOD motor command.Novelty responses were evoked in response to transient changes in artificial EOD amplitude as small as 1% of baseline amplitude, and in latency as small as 0.1 ms. Changes in latency were effective only at baseline delays of less than 12.4 ms.The sensitivity to small changes in latency supports the hypothesis that latency is used as a code for stimulus intensity in the active electrolocation system of mormyrid fish. The results also indicate that a corollary discharge signal associated with the EOD motor command is used to measure latency.Abbreviations EOD electric organ discharge - ELL electrosensory lateral line lobe - epsp excitatory post synaptic potential  相似文献   

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