Abstract: | These investigations are aimed at studying the influence of the electrical stimulation of the VIth nucleus (abducens nucleus) on responses of lateral geniculate cells in rabbits. The animals were prepared in the usual fashion for single cell recordings at the lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN). Results show that: Electrical stimulation of the VIth nucleus always produced excitatory discharges whose latency varied from 30 to 400 ms. Interestingly, an electrical pulse applied to the abducens nucleus was capable of enhancing the light-evoked responses without altering the spontaneous rate of firing. It thus seems that the ascending influence of the VIth nucleus manifests itself when it coincides with light responses. Most cells which were sensitive to electrical activation of the abducens nucleus had their receptive field located peripherally (greater than 50 degrees). Histological reconstructions of recording electrode tracts suggest that cells which responded to electrical stimulation were located in a narrow band lying dorsally relative to the LGN. This area can be paralleled with the perigeniculate area observed in other mammals, although not identified in rabbits. It is suggested that these extraretinal impulses which reach the LGN and emerge from an area surrounding the VIth nucleus are associated with corollary discharges. |