Abstract: | Investigation of unit responses of the cerebellar cortex (lobules VI–VII of the vermis) to acoustic stimulation showed that the great majority of neurons responded by a discharge of one spike or a group of spikes with a latent period of 10–40 msec and with a low fluctuation value. Neurons identified as Purkinje cells responded to sound either by inhibition of spontaneous activity or by a "climbing fiber response" with a latent period of 40–60 msec and with a high fluctuation value. In 4 of 80 neurons a prolonged (lasting about 1 sec or more), variable response with a latent period of 225–580 msec was observed. The minimal thresholds of unit responses to acoustic stimuli were distributed within the range from –7 to 77 dB, with a mode from 20 to 50 dB. All the characteristics of the cerebellar unit responses studied were independent of the intensity, duration, and frequency of the sound, like neurons of short-latency type in the inferior colliculi. In certain properties — firing pattern, latent period, and threshold of response — the cerebellar neurons resemble neurons of higher levels of the auditory system: the medial geniculate body and auditory cortex.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 5, No. 1, pp. 3–12, January–February, 1973. |