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1.
1. Responses of motor neurons in larvae and pupae of Manduca sexta to stimulation of tactile sensory neurons were measured in both semi-intact, and isolated nerve cord preparations. These motor neurons innervate abdominal intersegmental muscles which are involved in the production of a general flexion reflex in the larva, and the closure reflex of the pupal gin traps. 2. Larval motor neurons respond to stimulation of sensory neurons innervating abdominal mechanosensory hairs with prolonged, tonic excitation ipsilaterally, and either weak excitation or inhibition contralaterally (Figs. 4A, 6). 3. Pupae respond to tactile stimulation of mechanosensory hairs within the gin traps with a rapid closure reflex. Motor neurons which innervate muscles ipsilateral to the stimulus exhibit a large depolarization, high frequency firing, and abrupt termination (Figs. 2, 4B). Generally, contralateral motor neurons fire antiphasically to the ipsilateral motor neurons, producing a characteristic triphasic firing pattern (Figs. 7, 8) which is not seen in the larva. 4. Pupal motor neurons can also respond to sensory stimulation with other types of patterns, including rotational responses (Fig. 3A), gin trap opening reflexes (Fig. 3B), and 'flip-flop' responses (Fig. 9). 5. Pupal motor neurons, like larval motor neurons, do not show oscillatory responses to tonic current injection, nor do motor neurons of either stage appear to interact synaptically with one another. Most pupal motor neurons also exhibit i-V properties similar to those of larval motor neurons (Table 1; Fig. 10). Some pupal motor neurons, however, show a marked non-linear response to depolarizing current injection (Fig. 11).  相似文献   

2.
Summary Two morphological types of interneurones were found in the brainof Alloeoplana californica (Figs. 1, 2). Both respond to water vibration and to light offset (Fig. 3). These responses are blocked by Mg++ or Cd++ (Fig. 4), and habituate to repetitive stimuli (Figs. 6, 10). Even when the light response is habituated, light offset will dishabituate the vibration response (Figs. 7, 10); no other regime tested produced dishabituation of either response. These neurones receive higher-order sensory input, and make subthreshold excitatory synapses on motor pathways; intracellular tetraethylammonium lengthens the time course of the spikes (Fig. 5), and each such spike elicits a contraction in the anterior margin of the animal. We believe that they form part of the neuronal circuitry underlying arousal.Abbreviation TEA tetraethylammonium  相似文献   

3.
What cellular and network properties allow reliable neuronal rhythm generation or firing that can be started and stopped by brief synaptic inputs? We investigate rhythmic activity in an electrically-coupled population of brainstem neurons driving swimming locomotion in young frog tadpoles, and how activity is switched on and off by brief sensory stimulation. We build a computational model of 30 electrically-coupled conditional pacemaker neurons on one side of the tadpole hindbrain and spinal cord. Based on experimental estimates for neuron properties, population sizes, synapse strengths and connections, we show that: long-lasting, mutual, glutamatergic excitation between the neurons allows the network to sustain rhythmic pacemaker firing at swimming frequencies following brief synaptic excitation; activity persists but rhythm breaks down without electrical coupling; NMDA voltage-dependency doubles the range of synaptic feedback strengths generating sustained rhythm. The network can be switched on and off at short latency by brief synaptic excitation and inhibition. We demonstrate that a population of generic Hodgkin-Huxley type neurons coupled by glutamatergic excitatory feedback can generate sustained asynchronous firing switched on and off synaptically. We conclude that networks of neurons with NMDAR mediated feedback excitation can generate self-sustained activity following brief synaptic excitation. The frequency of activity is limited by the kinetics of the neuron membrane channels and can be stopped by brief inhibitory input. Network activity can be rhythmic at lower frequencies if the neurons are electrically coupled. Our key finding is that excitatory synaptic feedback within a population of neurons can produce switchable, stable, sustained firing without synaptic inhibition.  相似文献   

4.
Summary High-level mechanosensory interneurons integrate a substantial amount of polysynaptic input. We have used an identified interneuron, the crayfish (Procambarus clarki) caudal photoreceptor (CPR), to examine the extent and specificity of interneuronal input as received by a physiologically complex, smalldiameter sensory unit. Presynaptic central neurons were identified by antidromic stimulation of connective fibers and characterized physiologically relative to the bilateral responses observed in the paired CPR's. Eleven inhibitory interneurons have been identified, including cells with ipsilateral (Fig. 4), contralateral (Fig. 5) and bilateral effects (Fig. 6). Seven excitatory interneurons have been identified, including examples from each of the respective categories above (Figs. 7–9). The results of this survey are summarized in Table 1; axon locations are presented in Fig. 10.It has also been demonstrated that several of these fibers are themselves ascending mechanoreceptive interneurons (e.g., fiber 122, Fig. 1). Thus, for the encoding of environmental stimuli, these results indicate that central integration involves a lateral exchange of tactile information among a set of interrelated sensory interneurons. However, the possibility still exists that some of these fibers represent descending pathways for central influence of local (segmental) integrative processes.Abbreviations CPR caudal photoreceptor - EPSP excitatory postsynaptic potential - IPSP inhibitory postsynaptic potential This work has been supported in part by a Research Fellowship from Bryn Mawr College (to G.A.M.) and by Research Grants from NIH (NS-12971-03) and the Whitehall Foundation. This paper is a contribution of the Tallahassee, Sopchoppy and Gulf Coast Marine Biological Association (No. 123).  相似文献   

5.
1.  The terminal ganglion ofLocusta migratoria contains a number of non-giant, wind-sensitive, ascending and local interneurones. Six ascending (Figs. 1, 2) and 6 local (Figs. 6, 7) interneurones have been identified morphologically on the basis of intracellular stains with Lucifer Yellow.
2.  The physiological responses of the various cell types were recorded as the cerci were exposed to sound, wind, or electrical stimulation (Figs. 3, 8). Some cells summate the input from both cerci (Fig. 3), while others are excited by input from one side and inhibited by input from the other (Fig. 8). Conduction velocities for several non-giant ascending interneurones range from 1.5 m/s (cell 1) –2.1 m/s (cell 25).
3.  The morphologies and physiological responses of giant (GIN 1) and non-giant ascending interneurones (cells la, b) with somata in cluster 1 of neuromere 9 were compared using simultaneous intracellular recordings (Figs. 2A, 4). These neurones have very similar dendritic arborizations (Fig. 4A, B), and respond almost identically to cercal stimulation (Fig. 4Ci), but there do not appear to be any connections with GIN 1 (Fig. 4Cii, iii).
4.  The morphology (Fig. 5A, C), and response to cercal stimulation by wind (Fig. 5B) of a nongiant interneurone (cell 7) with its soma in cluster 1 of segment 8 (Fig. 5), are very similar to those of cluster 1 cells such as GIN 1 in segment 9.
5.  Of the 6 local interneurones (Figs. 6, 7) all except one (cell 9) have bilateral arborizations which may extend over several neuromeres within the ganglion (cells 10, 22). Several of the interneurones (cells 5, 9, 24) do not produce action potentials in response to cercal stimulation (Figs. 8, 10) or injection of depolarizing current (Fig. 11).
6.  Simultaneous recordings from pairs of interneurones demonstrate that giants and locals (GIN 2/cell 5; GIN 1/cell 9), as well as different local interneurones (cell 24/cell 5), receive input from the same wind-sensitive filiform afferent (Fig. 9).
7.  Local interneurones 5 and 22 are in different neuromeres of the terminal ganglion but have a similar gross morphology (Figs. 6, 7, 10). Cell 5, however, has arborizations projecting into both posterior cercal glomeruli (Fig. 7 A, inset), whereas only the ipsilateral branches of cell 22 extend posteriorly to the cercal glomerulus (Fig. 10C). Physiologically, cell 5 is depolarized by wind directed at both cerci (Fig. 10 A), cell 22 mainly by wind directed at the ipsilateral cercus (Fig. 10C). Cell 5 does not produce action potentials in response to wind whereas cell 22 does.
8.  Cell 5 occurs as a bilateral pair in the terminal ganglion (Figs. 7B, inset; 11). Simultaneous recordings of the bilateral homologues show that they share the input of at least one wind-sensitive filiform afferent (Fig. 11D), and that there are no connections between them (Fig. 11E). Simultaneous penetrations of local interneurone 5 and giant interneurones demonstrate a short-latency excitatory connection from GIN 3 to cell 5 (Fig. 12 A), and a long-latency excitatory connection from GIN 2 to cell 5.
9.  The roles of giant and non-giant interneurones in transmitting information to thoracic motor centres are discussed.
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6.
At the level of the J1 joint of each antenna of the rock lobster Palinurus vulgaris a hair plate sensory organ (hp) similar to those described in insects has been observed. The hp is located on the internal side of the S2 segment of the antenna, close to the soft articulating membrane of the J1 joint. It is formed by a triangular surface of cuticle about 3mm2 in area, covered with numerous hairs of different lengths (Figs. 1 and 2). Details of the hp were studied by scanning electron microscopy (Fig. 2). Physiological stimulation of the hp hairs occurs during medial movement of the J1 joint. Under this condition the soft articulating membrane rolls over the hairs and bends them progressively back onto the cuticle. Flexion of all the hairs corresponds to a medial movement of the J1 through 40 degrees. During this type of movement, the number of successively flexed hairs increases linearly (Fig. 3). Electrophysiological recordings of the hp sensory nerve correlated with selective mechanical stimulation of individual hairs demonstrated that each hair is innervated by a single sensory fiber. This sensory neurone responds phasically when the hair is flexed back onto the cuticle (as during an S2 medial movement) and when it returns to its resting position (as during an S2 lateral movement). Most of the sensory neurones are sensitive to the movement velocity of the hairs (Figs. 4 and 5). When the hair is maintained flexed its sensory neurone discharges tonically (Fig. 4). Electrical stimulation of the hp sensory nerve induced reflex actions in the external and internal rotator muscles of the segment S1. These effects were found to selectively activate the tonic motor command of these muscles (Fig. 6).  相似文献   

7.
Central lateral line pathways were mapped in the thronback ray, Platyrhinoidis triseriata, by analyzing depth profiles of averaged evoked potentials (AEPs), multiunit activity (MUA), and single unit recordings. Neural activity evoked by contra- or ipsilateral posterior lateral line nerve (pLLN) shock is restricted to the tectum mesencephali, the dorsomedial nucleus (DMN) and anterior nucleus (AN) of the mesencephalic nuclear complex, the posterior central thalamic nucleus (PCT), the lateral tuberal nucleus of the hypothalamus, and the deep medial pallium of the telencephalon (Figs. 2, 3, 4, 6, 7). Neural responses (AEPs and MUA) recorded in different lateral line areas differ with respect to shape, dynamic response properties, and/or latencies (Figs. 9, 10 and Table 1). Ipsilaterally recorded mesencephalic and diencephalic AEPs are less pronounced and of longer latency than their contralateral counterpart (Fig. 9 and Table 1). In contrast, AEP recorded in the telencephalon show a weak ipsilateral preference. If stimulated with a low amplitude water wave most DMN, AN, and tectal lateral line units respond in the frequency range 6.5 Hz to 200 Hz. Best frequencies (in terms of least displacement) are 75-150 Hz with a peak-to-peak water displacement of 0.04 micron sufficient to evoke a response in the most sensitive units (Fig. 11A, B, C). DMN and AN lateral line units have small excitatory receptive fields (RFs). Anterior, middle, and posterior body surfaces map onto the rostral, middle, and posterior brain surfaces of the contralateral DMN (Fig. 12). Some units recorded in the PCT are bimodal; they respond to a hydrodynamic flow field--generated with a ruler approaching the fish--only if the light is on and the eye facing the ruler is left uncovered (Fig. 13).  相似文献   

8.
NaCl胁迫初期 ,Na 主要在根和叶鞘中积累。相应地 ,根和叶鞘液泡膜ATP酶和焦磷酸酶水解活性、依赖ATP和PPi的质子泵活性及Na /H 逆向转运活性均明显增加 ,根和叶鞘的生长没有受到抑制。NaCl胁迫后期 ,Na 开始向地上部分运输并在叶片中积累。此时 ,叶片液泡膜质子泵和Na /H 逆向转运活性开始增加 ,根和叶鞘的Na/K比增加 ,其液泡膜ATP酶和焦磷酸酶水解活性、质子泵活性和Na /H 逆向转运活性下降。相应地 ,根和叶鞘的生长也下降。当保温介质中Na/K比超过 1时 ,液泡膜微囊ATP酶和焦磷酸酶活性均随Na/K比的增加而下降。表明非盐生植物液泡膜质子泵在盐胁迫的初期对Na 在液泡内的积累及其耐盐性起重要作用  相似文献   

9.
Summary The responses of contact chemosensory sensilla on the tarsi of the apple maggot fly,Rhagoletis pomonella (Walsh), to a range of concentrations of salt, sucrose and oviposition-deterrent pheromone were studied (Fig. 1). Examination of dose-response curves (Fig. 2), short- and long-term adaptation (Figs. 3+4, Table 1) and impulse height and duration (Fig. 5, Table 2) indicated that each stimulant elicited a characteristic response. Stimulation with mixtures of the solutions demonstrated that salt, sucrose and the pheromone each excites a different sensory cell (Fig. 6). A cell which does not respond to a stimulant with impulses may, nevertheless, be affected by that stimulant (Fig. 7).  相似文献   

10.
In semi‐intact preparations of the crab Cancer pagurus the normal output from the stomatogastric ganglion (StG) was a regular pyloric cycle (Figure 4). Repeated stimulation of the posterior stomach nerve (psn) of the posterior gastric mill proprioceptor (PSR) often induced series of spontaneous gastric cycles. We were therefore able to describe the normal gastric cycle as recorded in the output nerves from StG and to identify most of the relevant motor neurones by reference to the muscles that they innervate (Figure 10). The gastric cycle output was variable (Figures 5, 6), although in many preparations one complex type of output predominated (Figure 7). The basic feature of the gastric cycle was an alternation of activity between the single cardio‐pyloric neurone (CP) and a complex variable burst in the lateral cardiac (LC), the gastro‐pyloric (GP), the gastric (GM), and other associated neurones. During this normally occurring complex gastric burst significant changes occurred in the pyloric cycle, notably an increase in activity of the pacemaker pyloric dilator (PD) group and an inhibition of the lateral pyloric (LP), inferior cardiac (IC) and ventricular dilator (VD) neurones (Figures 6, 7, 8, 9). These changes are probably associated with an opening of the cardio‐pyloric valve and food passage into the pyloric filter. The gastric output was related to the normally observed movements of the dorsal ossicles of the gastric mill and thus to the operation of the teeth of the mill (Figure 11). Increased input from the PSR is associated with the grinding action of the teeth which is caused by the complex gastric burst (Figure 12).

Stimulation of the psn during an ongoing regular pyloric output caused changes in the cycle which mimicked those occurring during the spontaneous gastric cycle (Figure 13; Table 1). Stimulation of the psn during ongoing gastric activity also affected the gastric units (Figure 14). The input pathway from the PSR is shown to be through the stomatogastric nerve (sgn), the connection between the commissural ganglia and the stomatogastric ganglion (Figure 15). The commissural ganglia are known to receive most of the sensory input from the foregut and PSR input is probably processed there. Recordings from the sgn show that psn stimulation activates a small number of centrally originating units, and that the activity of these units coincides with the pyloric output changes (Figures 15, 16). We therefore label the units command interneurones. Their effects could be mediated by direct connections to only the PD pacemaker neurones of the pyloric cycle. Control experiments showed that PSR input is not necessary for the pyloric output changes to occur during gastric output but that similar output changes can be evoked by input resulting from induced gastric movements (Figure 15(E)). We think that the pyloric cycle output changes are normally controlled by a number of mechanisms at different levels (Figure 17). We cannot easily explain the effects of PSR input on the gastric cycle neurones.

These findings are important because they allow us to study a specific input to the StG without disrupting its normal input‐output pathways to the central nervous system. Further experiments on the system designed to test the assumption that the sgn units are in fact responsible for the pyloric output changes, and to investigate the processing of the PSR input are outlined.  相似文献   

11.
Summary The paired lanterns of the larval fireflyPhoturis versicolor are bilaterally innervated by four dorsal unpaired median (DUM) neurons the somata of which are found in the terminal abdominal ganglion (A8) and which stain with Neutral Red (Fig. 1A). Both intra- and extracellularly recorded activity in these neurons is always associated with a bilateral glow response, or BGR (Figs. 3 and 4). Luminescence cannot be initiated or maintained in the absence of DUM neuron excitation. Furthermore, there is a linear causative relationship between the frequency of DUM neuron activity and the amplitude of the resultant BGR (Figs. 6 and 7).Due to the intrinsic bilateral morphology, firefly DUM neurons may be antidromically activated through either lantern nerve, resulting in the initiation of luminescence in the contralateral lantern (Figs. 8 and 9). This activation is unaffected by high Mg++ saline indicating that the DUM neurons provide a direct pathway for conduction through the ganglion (Fig. 9). The DUM neurons receive synaptic input from axons descending through both anterior connectives, however, stimulation of only one connective results in a BGR since excitation is carried to both sides of the periphery through the bilateral axons.Firefly DUM neurons exhibit physiological qualities typical of neurosecretory cells: spikes are characterized by a slow time course and a long and deep afterhyperpolarization (Fig. 10). This is consistent with the observation that spontaneous firing rates are usually below 3 Hz, but nevertheless elicit a strong BGR (Figs. 3 and 5). The physiological evidence presented in this study correlates well with the morphological, pharmacological and biochemical evidence compiled from previous studies, which indicates that the four DUM neurons represent the sole photomotor output from the central nervous system to the larval lanterns. Evidence is discussed which indicates that these effects are mediated throught the release of octopamine, long presumed to be the lantern neurotransmitter. These results, therefore, describe a novel and unexpected role for DUM neurons in regulating an unusual invertebrate effector tissue and further expands the growing list of functions for octopamine in neural control mechanisms.Abbreviations A1-A7 first through seventh abdominal ganglia - A8 terminal abdominal ganglion - DUM dorsal unpaired median - BGR bilateral glow response  相似文献   

12.
1. Intracellular recording and staining was used to characterize neurons in the crayfish (Procambarus clarkii) brain that respond to chemical stimuli applied to the major olfactory organs, the antennules. 2. Two distinct morphological types of neurons that have major projections in the olfactory lobes (OLs) of the brain were characterized anatomically (Figs. 1, 2, 3; Table 2) and physiologically (Figs. 4, 5, 6; Table 3). 3. Different individual neurons of one type, with similar 'tree-like' projections in the OLs, have somata distributed in at least 5 different cell body clusters of the brain (Fig. 3) and link different subsets of neuropilar lobes through their distributed arbors (Fig. 1, Table 2). 4. Excitatory, inhibitory and mixed responses were recorded in different neurons when odorant mixtures or individual components of these mixtures were applied to the antennules. Response spectra to individual components were broad and overlapping, but not identical in the neurons tested (Fig. 4; Table 3). Mixture interactions appear to be additive in most of the neurons that we tested, but evidence was obtained for mixture suppression in several cases (Fig. 6). 5. Most of the neurons recorded in this study responded only to stimulation of the ipsilateral antennule (Fig. 5), although subthreshold activity to stimuli applied contralaterally was recorded in several neurons that were strongly excited by ipsilateral stimuli. 6. Chemoresponsive neurons without projections in OL's that have all of their branches confined to the brain, or that project an axon in the circumesophageal connective, are described (Fig. 7).  相似文献   

13.
When a walking fly approaches a stationary object two types of body movements are distinguishable. Type I body movements are characterized by low frequencies (0.4–1.3 Hz) and large amplitudes (28–65°). Superimposed on these movements are type II body movements which are characterized by high frequencies (7.3–10.6 Hz) and small amplitudes (5.9–8.2°) (Figs. 3–6; Table 1). Type II movements occur no matter whether the fly is fixating a pattern or orientating itself in homogeneous surroundings without any pattern. In contrast, only 72% of the flies with immobilized heads and 62% of the flies with movable heads make type I body movements. The amplitude of type I and type II body movements increases slightly after immobilization of the head. Binocular as well as monocular pattern projection occurs for the whole walking trajectory (Fig. 7–9). Monocular pattern projection seems to be more frequent in flies with immobilized heads than in those with movable heads. The degree of pattern fluctuations in the visual field of the flies increases slightly along the walking trajectory. Near the starting point in the centre of the arena it amounts to 5–7°, while at the end of the walking trajectory it amounts to 8–10° (Table 2). The following conclusions and hypothesis can be drawn from these experiments. 1. The graph BT for the direction of the fly's logitudinal axis can be approximated by the first derivative of the walking trajectory WT, that means, dWT(x)/dxBT(x) (Fig. 11). 2. The amplitudes of type II body movements are caused by the alternating movements of the legs during forward motion, while type I body movements are classified as exploring movements. During evolution of visually guided behaviour it is possible that blowflies have adapted their elementary movement detector system to type II body movements. 3. The types of pattern projection into the visual field of the fly while approaching an object can be explained by a simple neuronal network characterized by either inhibitory and/or excitatory influences of the visually activated neurones on the motor neurones generating the propulsive forces, that means the forward motion. In addition it is postulated that the large frontal and antero-lateral receptive fields of these neurones are not coupled with the motor centres on the same side of the body (Fig. 12).  相似文献   

14.
Summary The activity of flight interneurons was recorded intracellularly in intact, tethered flying locusts (Locusta migratoria) and after removal of sensory input from the wing receptors. Depolarization patterns and spike discharges were characterized and compared for the two situations.In general, depressor interneurons (n=6) showed only minor changes in their activity as a result of deafferentation (Fig. 1). Exceptions were interneurons 308 and 506 (Fig. 2). By contrast, all but one of the elevator interneurons (n=9) produced distinctly different depolarization patterns in intact locusts and following deafferentation. Three different groups of elevator interneurons were found (excluding the one exceptional neuron, Fig. 6). (i) One group of interneurons (n=4) produced different, superthreshold depolarizations in intact and deafferented animals (Fig. 3). Characteristic, biphasic depolarizations were recorded from these fibres at lower wingbeat frequencies in the intact situation but only single, delayed potentials were recorded after deafferentation. (ii) The second group of interneurons (n=3) exhibited distinct rhythmic activity only in intact animals. After deafferentation their depolarizations were small and often below the threshold for spike initiation (Fig. 4). (iii) One interneuron produced rhythmic flight motor oscillations only after deafferentation. In intact locusts the membrane potential of this neuron showed very small oscillations and remained subthreshold (Fig. 5).Four main conclusions emerge from these data. (i) The activity of elevator interneurons is under greater sensory control than that of the depressors. This confirms the results of our previous electromyographic and motoneuronal analyses, (ii) A considerable portion of elevator activity is generated as a result of phasic sensory feedback. An essential input is from the hindwing tegulae (Table 1; Pearson and Wolf 1988). (iii) The activity of depressor interneurons appears to be determined by central mechanisms to a major extent. (iv) Different sets of central neurons appear to be involved in flight pattern generation in intact and deafferented locusts —although the two sets share many common elements.Abbreviations EMG electromyogram - PSP postsynaptic potential (EPSP excitatory andIPSP inhibitory)  相似文献   

15.
  1. The morphology of descending interneurons (DNs) which have arborizations in the lateral accessory lobe (LAL) of the protocerebrum, the higher order olfactory center, and have an axon in the ventral nerve cord (VNC), were characterized in the male silkworm moth, Bombyx mori.
  2. Two clusters (group I, group II) of DNs which have arborizations mainly in the LALs were morphologically characterized. The axons of these DNs are restricted to the dorsal part of the each connective (Figs. 1–5).
  3. Pheromonal responses of the group I and group II DNs were characterized. Flipflopping activity patterns, which have two distinct firing frequencies (high and low) in response to sequential pheromonal stimulation, were usually recorded (Figs.6–10).
  4. Two types of flipflopping activity patterns were classified into those that had an antiphasic relationship (called the ‘FF’ type) between the left and right connectives and those with a synchronized relationship (‘ff’ type) (Figs. 8–12). We propose that some group II DNs show ‘FF’ flipflopping activity patterns (Fig. 10).
  5. A state transition was usually elicited by less than 10 ng bombykol, the principal pheromone component. Extra impulses were elicited during constant light stimulation (Fig. 9).
  6. Our results suggest that the LAL olfactory pathways might be important for producing flipflopping activity patterns (Fig. 11).
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16.
Summary A new training and testing paradigm for walking sheep blowflies, Lucilia cuprina, is described. A fly is trained by presenting it with a droplet of sugar solution on a patch of coloured paper. After having consumed the sugar droplet, the fly starts a systematic search. While searching, it is confronted with an array of colour marks consisting of four colours displayed on the test cardboard (Fig. 1). Colours used for training and test include blue, green, yellow, orange, red, white and black.Before training, naive flies are tested for their spontaneous colour preferences on the test array. Yellow is visited most frequently, green least frequently (Table 2). Spontaneous colour preferences do not simply depend on subjective brightness (Table 1).The flies trained to one of the colours prefer this colour significantly (Figs. 5 and 9–11). This behaviour reflects true learning rather than sensitisation (Figs. 6–7). The blue and yellow marks are learned easily and discriminated well (Figs. 5, 9, 11). White is also discriminated well, although the response frequencies are lower than to blue and yellow (Fig. 11). Green is discriminated from blue but weakly from yellow and orange (Figs. 5, 9, 10). Red is a stimulus as weak as black (Figs. 8, 9). These features of colour discrimination reflect the spectral loci of colours in the colour triangle (Fig. 14).The coloured papers seem to be discriminated mainly by the hue of colours (Fig. 12), but brightness may also be used to discriminate colour stimuli (Fig. 13).  相似文献   

17.
Summary The activity of auditory receptor cells and prothoracic auditory neurons of the cricket,Gryllus bimaculatus, was recorded intracellularly while the animal walked on a sphere or while passive movement was imposed on a foreleg.During walking the responses to simulated calling song is altered since (i) the auditory sensory cells and interneurons discharged impulses in the absence of sound stimuli (Figs. 1, 3) and (ii) the number of action potentials in response to sound is reduced in interneurons (Figs. 2, 3).These two effects occurred in different phases of the leg movement during walking and therefore masked, suppressed or did not affect the responses to auditory stimuli (Figs. 3, 4). Hence there is a time window within which the calling song can be detected during walking (Fig. 5).The extra excitation of receptors and interneurons is probably produced by vibration of the tympanum because (i) the excitation occurred at the same time as the leg placement (Fig. 4), (ii) during walking on only middle and hindlegs, no extra action potentials were observed (Fig. 6), (iii) in certain phases of passive movements receptor cells and interneurons were excited as long as the ipsilateral ear was not blocked (Figs. 8, 9).Suppression of auditory responses seems to be peripheral as well as central in origin because (i) it occurred at particular phases during active and passive leg movements in receptor cells and interneurons (Figs. 1, 4, 9), (ii) it disappeared if the ear was blocked during passive leg movements (Fig. 9) and (iii) it persisted if the animal walked only on the middle and hind legs (Fig. 6).  相似文献   

18.
In the stick insect Carausius morosus identified nonspiking interneurons (type E4) were investigated in the mesothoracic ganglion during intraand intersegmental reflexes and during searching and walking.In the standing and in the actively moving animal interneurons of type E4 drive the excitatory extensor tibiae motoneurons, up to four excitatory protractor coxae motoneurons, and the common inhibitor 1 motoneuron (Figs. 1–4).In the standing animal a depolarization of this type of interneuron is induced by tactile stimuli to the tarsi of the ipsilateral front, middle and hind legs (Fig. 5). This response precedes and accompanies the observed activation of the affected middle leg motoneurons. The same is true when compensatory leg placement reflexes are elicited by tactile stimuli given to the tarsi of the legs (Fig. 6).During forward walking the membrane potential of interneurons of type E4 is strongly modulated in the step-cycle (Figs.8–10). The peak depolarization occurs at the transition from stance to swing. The oscillations in membrane potential are correlated with the activity profile of the extensor motoneurons and the common inhibitor 1 (Fig. 9).The described properties of interneuron type E4 in the actively behaving animal show that these interneurons are involved in the organization and coordination of the motor output of the proximal leg joints during reflex movements and during walking.Abbreviations CLP reflex, compensatory leg placement reflex - CI1 common inhibitor I motoneuron - fCO femoral chordotonal organ - FETi fast extensor tibiae motoneuron - FT femur-tibia - SETi slow extensor tibiae motoneuron  相似文献   

19.
1. Neurons in the antennal lobe (AL) of the moth Manduca sexta respond to the application, via pressure injection into the neuropil, of acetylcholine (ACh). When synaptic transmission is not blocked, both excitatory (Fig. 2) and inhibitory (Fig. 3) responses are seen. 2. Responses to ACh appear to be receptor-mediated, as they are associated with an increase in input conductance (Figs. 2B and 3B) and are dose-dependent (Fig. 2 C). 3. All neurons responsive to ACh are also excited by nicotine. Responses to nicotine are stronger and more prolonged than responses to ACh (Fig. 4C). No responses are observed to the muscarinic agonist, oxotremorine (Fig. 4 B). 4. Curare blocks responses of AL neurons to applied ACh, while atropine and dexetimide are only weakly effective at reducing ACh responses (Figs. 5 and 6). 5. Curare is also more effective than atropine or dexetimide at reducing synaptically-mediated responses of AL neurons (Fig. 7). 6. In one AL neuron, bicuculline methiodide (BMI) blocked the IPSP produced by electrical stimulation of the antennal nerve, but it did not reduce the inhibitory response to application of ACh (Fig. 8).  相似文献   

20.
Summary Motor neurons innervating the dorsal longitudinal muscles of a noctuid moth receive synaptic input activated by auditory stimuli. Each ear of a noctuid moth contains two auditory neurons that are sensitive to ultrasound (Fig. 1). The ears function as bat detectors. Five pairs of large motor neurons and three pairs of small motor neurons found in the pterothoracic ganglia innervate the dorsal longitudinal (depressor) muscles of the mesothorax (Figs. 2 to 5). In non-flying preparations the motor neurons receive no oscillatory synaptic input. Synaptic input to a cell resulting from ultrasonic stimulation is consistent and can be either depolarizing or hyperpolarizing (Figs. 6 to 9). Quiescent neurons only rarely fire a spike in response to auditory inputs. Motor neurons in flying preparations receive oscillatory synaptic drive from the flight pattern generator and usually fire a spike for each wingbeat cycle (Figs. 10 to 12). Ultrasonic stimulation can provide augmented synaptic drive causing a neuron to fire two spikes per wingbeat cycle thus increasing flight vigor (Fig. 11). The same stimulus presented on another occasion can also inhibit spiking in the same motor neuron, but the rhythmic drive remains (Fig. 12). Thus, when the flight oscillator is running auditory stimuli can modulate neuronal responses in different ways depending on some unknown state of the nervous system. Sound intensity is the only stimulus parameter essential for activating the auditory pathway to these motor neurons. The intensity must be sufficient to excite two or three auditory neurons. The significance of these responses in relation to avoidance behavior to bats is discussed.  相似文献   

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