Abstract: | Summated electrical activity of the human amygdaloid nucleus was investigated in the neurosurgical clinic by chronically implanted electrodes. It was found that odoriferous stimulation of this structure produced bursts of rapid rhythm (20–30 cps, 30–50 µV). The quasisinusoidal waves of olfactory rhythm consist of sinusoidal components which are more pronounced within the 20–30-Hz frequency range. Spindling of 1–3 sec duration occurs at the end of inhalation and the beginning of exhalation in time with breathing. During monorhinal breathing this activity, whose amplitude depends on degree of olfactory stimulation, can only be recorded ipsilaterally. Room air also activates the amygdaloid nucleus, but less strongly than odoriferous substances: No characteristic odor-dependent differences were discovered in the frequency range of the olfactory rhythm within a 20–30-Hz band.Institute of Physiology, Kiev State University, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 1, pp. 61–69, January–February, 1986. |