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1.
The voltage-gated currents in the fly lobula plate tangential cellswere examined using the switched electrode voltage clamp technique. InCH cells, two currents were identified (Figs. 1, 2): a slow calciuminward current and a delayed rectifying, noninactivating potassiumoutward current. HS and VS cells appear to possess similar currentsto CH cells, but in addition, exhibit a fast-activating sodium inwardcurrent and a sodium-activated potassium outward current(Figs. 3, 4). While the delayed rectifying potassium current in allthree cell classes is responsible for the observed outwardrectification described previously (Borst and Haag, 1996), the sodiuminward current produces the fast and irregular spikelikedepolarizations found in HS and VS cells but not in CH cells: Whenthe sodium current is blocked by either TTX or intracellular QX314,no more action potentials can be elicited in HS cells undercurrent-clamp conditions (Fig. 5). As is demonstrated in HS cells,space clamp conditions are sufficient to suppress synapticallyinduced action potentials (Fig. 6).The currents described above were incorporated with the appropriatecharacteristics into compartmental models of the cells (Figs. 7, 8).The anatomical and electrically passive membrane parameters of thesecells were determined in a preceding paper (Borst and Haag,1996). After fitting the current parameters to the voltage-clamp data(Fig. 9), the model cells qualitatively mimicked the fly tangentialcells under current clamp conditions in response to current injection(Fig. 10). The simulations demonstrated that the electricalcompactness seen in the HS and VS cells, either in passive models orin active models during continuous hyperpolarization, decreasedsignificantly in the active models during continuous depolarization(Fig. 11). Active HS models reproduce the frequency-dependentamplification of current injected into their axon (Fig. 12).  相似文献   

2.
Postsynaptic potentials evoked in accessory nerve motoneurons by stimulation of the ipsilateral and contralateral red nuclei were investigated in acute experiments on cats anesthetized with chloralose and pentobarbital. Polysynaptic EPSPs with latent periods of 5.2 to 16 (mean 9.1 ± 0.7) msec and from 5.5 to 18 (mean 10.3 ± 0.9) msec, respectively, appeared in motoneurons of the accessory nerve in response to stimulation of the contralateral and ipsilateral red nuclei. A minimum of two or three stimuli was necessary to produce EPSPs in these motoneurons. In response to single stimulation of the contralateral and ipsilateral red nuclei EPSPs appeared in four motoneurons of the trapezius muscle with latent periods of 2.5 to 5.0 and 3.0 to 5.2 msec, respectively. An increase in the number of stimuli led to action potential generation by motoneurons. The functional role of such activation is discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institue of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 5, pp. 532–536, September–October, 1982.  相似文献   

3.
SummarySummary Combining intracellular recording and dye injection techniques, the horizontal cells of the blowfly,Phaenicia (= Lucilia) sericata, were studied.Anatomy In each lobula plate, one finds a set of three cells, termed NH-, EH- and SH-cell. EH occurs in two distinct anatomical forms, EH1 and EH2, differing in their respective branching patterns of the axon at the frontal surface of the lobula plate. Each cell's dendrite covers approximately a third of the surface of the lobula plate corresponding to a third of the visual field of the ipsilateral eye. These dendrites possess postsynaptic spines. The axons of all three cells pass along the frontal surface of the lobula plate within the inner chiasma; they cross the optic peduncle and enter the central protocerebrum where they form a second arborization, the axonal arborization consisting of dorsally extending collaterals. The axons terminate in the posterior slope of the ventrolateral protocerebrum. The axonal arborization as well as the axonal terminals possess telodendritic knobs. Ultrastructural investigations show that the lobula plate-dendrite possesses exclusively postsynaptic chemical synapses, and that the axonal arborisation and the axonal terminals possess pre- as well as postsynaptic chemical synapses. The very endings of the axons are exclusively presynaptic.Physiology The horizontal cells respond to stimulation within the ipsi- and/or contralateral receptive field. Regressive motion within the contralateral receptive field induces EPSPs and action potentials of small amplitude (10–35 mV); progressive motion is ineffective. Within the ipsilateral receptive field, regressive motion hyperpolarizes the cell membrane whereas progressive motion induces a strong depolarizing membrane potential-shift with superimposed fast potential changes of noisy appearance. Thus, the horizontal cells respond to rotational movement of the surround around the high axis of the animal: clockwise rotation excites the horizontal cells of the right lobula plate and counterclockwise motion those of the left lobula plate, respectively. However, this compound potential behaviour can only be recorded in the lobula plate-axon and main dendrites, whereas the horizontal cells respond tocontralateral regressive motion with action potentialsonly in their axonal terminals in the posterior slope; no graded potentials can be recorded in this cell region if stimulation occurs within theipsilateral receptive field. It is discussed that the previously described graded potentials for the axonal terminals (Hausen 1976b) can only be measured if the cells are already damaged. The probable cause of this change in response behaviour from action potentials to a compound potential behaviour (consisting of graded potentials and action potentials though of small amplitude) is discussed.This research was supported by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft through grants Ec56/1a + b and a Heisenberg stipend EC 56/3, funds from the SFB 114, and a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF BMS 74-21712) awarded to the author and L.G. Bishop. I am indebted to Dr. A. Whittle and particularly to Prof. K. Meller for their invaluable help in ultrathin sectioning and to Mrs. B. Decker who introduced me to the technique of cutting serial semithin sections. Prof. K. Hamdorf helped with many stimulating discussions. I am most grateful to Dr. W. Broughton for kindly correcting the English style.  相似文献   

4.
Intracellular recordings combined with iontophoretic injection of Procion Yellow M4RAN were used to study the anatomy and physiology of the centrifugal horizontal cells (CH-cells) in the lobula plate of the blowfly, Phaenicia sericata.Anatomy: The CH-cells comprise a set of two homolateral, giant visual interneurones (DCH, VCH) at the rostral surface of each lobula plate. Their extensive arborizations in the lobula plate possess bulbous swellings (boutons terminaux). The arborization of one cell (DCH) covers the dorsal, and the arborization of the other cell (VCH) the ventral half of the lobula plate. Their axons run jointly with those of the horizontal cells through the chiasma internum and the optic peduncle. Their protocerebral arborization possesses spines; they form a dense network together with the axonal arborization of the horizontal cells, a second type of giant homolateral cell most sensitive to horizontal motion. The protocerebral arborization of the CH-cells gives rise to a cell body fibre which traverses the protocerebrum dorsally to the oesophageal canal. The cell body lies on the contralateral side laterally and slightly dorsally to the oesophageal canal in the frontal cell body layer.Physiology: The CH-cells respond with graded potentials to rotatory movements of their surround. Cells in the right lobula plate respond with excitation (excitatory postsynaptic potentials, membrane depolarization) to clockwise motion (contralateral regressive, ipsilateral progressive), and with inhibition (inhibitory postsynaptic potentials, membrane hyperpolarization) to counterclockwise motion in either or both receptive fields; CH-cells respond to motion presented to the ipsilateral and/or contralateral eye. Cells of the left lobula plate respond correspondingly to the reverse directions of motion. Vertical pattern motion and stationary patterns are ineffective.The heterolateral H1-neurone elicits excitatory postsynaptic potentials in the DCH-cell; these postsynaptic potentials are tightly correlated 1:1 to the preceding H1-action potentíal. The delay between the peak of the action potential and the beginning of the DCH-postsynaptic potential is 1.15 msec, agreeing very well with the value reported previously for the blowfly, Calliphora (Hausen, 1976a). The synaptic input and output connections of the CH-cells are discussed.  相似文献   

5.
Rowell CH 《Tissue & cell》1991,23(2):271-276
1. Thirty-seven pairs of mesothoracic interneurons respond selectively to visual or ocellar stimuli corresponding to deviations from course in flight, expressed as angular rotation around the three spatial axes. 2. Sensitivities to roll and yaw are very strongly associated. All interneurons showing a directional preference for yaw rotations showed the same preference for roll rotations. A few roll-sensitive cells were not directionally sensitive to yaw. Some interneurons respond exclusively to pitch rotations, most to both pitch and roll/yaw. 3. Approximately equal numbers of interneurons prefer pitch up, pitch down, roll/yaw to the ipsilateral side and roll/yaw to the contralateral side. All four possible combinations of pitch (up or down) with roll/yaw (ipsilateral or contralateral) preferences occur with equal probability. 4. No relationship between neuronal structure and directional properties could be discerned. 5. The average latency of the ocellar EPSPs recorded in the interneurons is not significantly different from the average latency of the ocellar spike in the descending neurons (at the same temperature and in the same ganglion). The average ocellar IPSP latency is 8.5 ms longer. The data support the hypothesis that most EPSPs are derived from monosynaptic inputs from the DNs, and most IPSPs from polysynaptic inputs. A few EPSPs are also derived from polysynaptic inputs. 6. Most of these neurons are sensitive to wind, at least some directionally so, in a manner functionally compatible with their visual or ocellar directionality, and most are excited. Two neurons respond to movement of small objects in the visual field, and 5 to high frequency sound.  相似文献   

6.
Postsynaptic potentials evoked by stimulation of ipsilateral and contralateral horizontal semicircular canals in motoneurons of muscles tilting and turning the head were investigated in acute experiments on cats anesthetized with chloralose and pentobarbital. Stimulation of the ipsilateral canal evoked EPSPs with latent periods varying from 1.8 to 10.0 msec in 25 of these motoneurons and IPSPs with latent periods varying from 1.9 to 3.9 msec in 10 of them. Calculation of the impulse conduction time from the ipsilateral semicircular canal through Deiters' nucleus to the cervical motoneurons indicates that EPSPs with latent periods of under 3.8 msec may be regarded as disynaptic, and those with latent periods of over 3.8 msec as polysynaptic. Stimulation of the contralateral canal evoked EPSPs with latent periods varying from 1.8 to 6.0 msec in 19 motoneurons and IPSPs with latent periods varying from 3.2 to 3.9 msec in two cells. The possible pathways of transmission of these influences and their functional role are discussed.  相似文献   

7.
在蜜蜂被刺激眼的同侧视叶内记录方向选择前进和后退水平运动灵敏的细胞反应。水平前进运动灵敏细胞对同侧前进运动的反应为很强的兴奋和去极化,以及去极化伴随有锋电位发放,同侧的后退运动引起抑制和超极化。在仅刺激对侧眼时,发放的频率不依赖于运动。水平后奶退运动灵敏的细胞对同侧水平后退运动反应出很强的兴奋和去极化,其去极化上伴随有锋电位发放,锋电位达不到零电位而且在其终点没有回射,同侧的前进运动几乎没有反应。  相似文献   

8.
L Ding  JI Gold 《Neuron》2012,75(5):865-874
In contrast to the well-established roles of the striatum in movement generation and value-based decisions, its contributions to perceptual decisions lack direct experimental support. Here, we show that electrical microstimulation in the monkey caudate nucleus influences both choice and saccade response time on a visual motion discrimination task. Within a drift-diffusion framework, these effects consist of two components. The perceptual component biases choices toward ipsilateral targets, away from the neurons' predominantly contralateral response fields. The choice bias is consistent with a nonzero starting value of the diffusion process, which increases and decreases decision times for contralateral and ipsilateral choices, respectively. The nonperceptual component decreases and increases nondecision times toward contralateral and ipsilateral targets, respectively, consistent with the caudate's role in saccade generation. The results imply a causal role for the caudate in perceptual decisions used to select saccades that may be distinct from its role in executing those saccades. VIDEO ABSTRACT:  相似文献   

9.
Three pairs of nonspiking giant interneurons (NGIs; G1, G2, and G3) of the crayfish brain responded with depolarizing and hyperpolarizing graded potentials to body tilt in roll to the ipsi- and contralateral sides in the dark. The higher and the larger the angle of body tilt, the larger was the amplitude of the geotactic responses. In ipsilaterally statocystectomized animals, all the NGIs responded with hyperpolarizing potentials only to the contralateral side-down tilt, whereas in contralaterally statocystectomized animals, they responded with depolarizing potentials only to the ipsilateral side-down tilt. In bilaterally statocystectomized animals, none of the NGIs responded to body tilt in the dark, but in the presence of an overhead light, they exhibited depolarizing and hyperpolarizing potentials in response to body tilt to the ipsi-and contralateral sides, respectively. All the NGIs responded with depolarizing and hyperpolarizing graded potentials to illumination of the contra- and ipsilateral eyes, respectively. The amplitude of these visual responses, however, varied in association with the amplitude of the geotactic response produced by body tilt. These results indicate that the NGIs integrate the sensory inputs from eyes and statocysts and that the interaction between sensory inputs from the left and right sensory organs with either the same modality or with different modalities enhance the directional sensitivity of NGIs as premotoneurons in the compensatory oculomotor system.  相似文献   

10.
Motion stimuli in one visual hemifield activate human primary visual areas of the contralateral side, but suppress activity of the corresponding ipsilateral regions. While hemifield motion is rare in everyday life, motion in both hemifields occurs regularly whenever we move. Consequently, during motion primary visual regions should simultaneously receive excitatory and inhibitory inputs. A comparison of primary and higher visual cortex activations induced by bilateral and unilateral motion stimuli is missing up to now. Many motion studies focused on the MT+ complex in the parieto-occipito-temporal cortex. In single human subjects MT+ has been subdivided in area MT, which was activated by motion stimuli in the contralateral visual field, and area MST, which responded to motion in both the contra- and ipsilateral field. In this study we investigated the cortical activation when excitatory and inhibitory inputs interfere with each other in primary visual regions and we present for the first time group results of the MT+ subregions, allowing for comparisons with the group results of other motion processing studies. Using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), we investigated whole brain activations in a large group of healthy humans by applying optic flow stimuli in and near the visual field centre and performed a second level analysis. Primary visual areas were activated exclusively by motion in the contralateral field but to our surprise not by central flow fields. Inhibitory inputs to primary visual regions appear to cancel simultaneously occurring excitatory inputs during central flow field stimulation. Within MT+ we identified two subregions. Putative area MST (pMST) was activated by ipsi- and contralateral stimulation and located in the anterior part of MT+. The second subregion was located in the more posterior part of MT+ (putative area MT, pMT).  相似文献   

11.
The three horizontal cells of the lobula plate of the blowflyCalliphora erythrocephala were studied anatomically and physiologically by means of cobalt impregnations and intracellular recordings combined with Procion and Lucifer Yellow injections. The cells are termed north, equatorial and south horizontal cell (HSN, HSE, HSS) and are major output neurons of the optic lobe. 1. The dendritic arborizations of the HSN, HSE, HSS reside in a thin anterior layer of the lobula plate and extend over the dorsal, equatorial and ventral parts of this neuropil, respectively. Due to the retinotopic organization of the optic lobe, these parts correspond anatomically to respective regions of the ipsilateral visual field. Homologue horizontal cells in both lobula plates of the same animal and in different animals are highly variable with respect to their individual dendritic branching patterns. They are extraordinarily constant, on the other hand, with regard to the position and size of their dendritic fields as well as their dendritic branching density distributions. Each cell covers about 40% of the total area of the lobula plate and shows the highest dendritic density near the lateral margin of the neuropil which subserves the frontal eye region. The axons of the horizontal cells are relatively short and large in diameter; they terminate in the posterior ventrolateral protocerebrum. 2. The horizontal cells are directionally selective motion sensitive visual interneurons responding preferentially to progressive (front to back) motion in the ipsilateral visual field with graded depolarization of their axons and superimposed action potentials. Stimulation with motion in the reverse direction leads to hyperpolarizing graded responses. The HSE and HSN are additionally activated by regressive motion in the contralateral visual field.  相似文献   

12.
1. A novel approach using a Gaussian white noise as stimulus is described which allowed quantitative analysis of neuronal responses in the cercal system of the cockroach, Periplaneta americana. Cerci were stimulated by air displacement which was modulated by a sinusoidal and a white noise signal. During the stimulation, intracellular recordings were made from a uniquely identifiable, nonspiking, local interneuron which locates within the terminal abdominal ganglion. The white noise stimulation was cross-correlated with the evoked response to compute first- and second-order kernels that could define the cell's response dynamics. 2. The interneuron, cell 101, has an exceptionally large transverse neurite that connects two asymmetrical dendritic arborizations located on both sides of the ganglion. 3. The first-order Wiener kernels in cell 101 were biphasic (differentiating). The waveforms of the kernels produced by the ipsilateral and contralateral stimulations were roughly mirror images of each other: the kernels produced by wind stimuli on the side ipsilateral to the cell body of the interneuron are initially depolarized and then hyperpolarized, whereas those on the other side are initially hyperpolarized. The polarity reversal occurred along the midline of the animal's body, and no well-defined kernel was produced by a stimulus directed head on or from the tail. 4. Mean square error (MSE) between the actual response and the model prediction suggests that the linear component in cell 101 comprises half of the cell's total response (MSEs for the linear models were about 50% at preferred directions), whereas the second-order, non-linear component is insignificant. The linear component of the wind-evoked response was bandpass with the preferred frequency of 70-90 Hz. 5. Accounting for a noise, we reasonably assumed that at high frequencies the graded response in cell 101 is linearly related to a modulation of the air displacement and sensitive to the rate of change of the signal (i.e., wind velocity) and the direction of its source. It is suggested that the dynamics of the first-order kernel simply reflect the dynamics of sensory receptors that respond linearly to wind stimulation.  相似文献   

13.
L W Fung  M S Ostrowski 《Life sciences》1984,35(20):2071-2078
Our earlier spin label electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) studies of hereditary spherocytosis (HS) erythrocyte revealed the existence of structural alteration(s) when the membrane is subjected to heat stress. We have now used saturation transfer EPR to show restricted motion in membrane proteins even without subjecting membrane to stress. The abnormal motional behavior is amplified when membranes are incubated at 47 degrees C and is readily detectable by conventional EPR. Gel electrophoresis and lipid assays show that proteins but not lipids are released upon heating. Thus, the more restricted motions in HS membranes may be due to a different membrane protein organization, ultimately resulting in the abnormal morphology of HS cells.  相似文献   

14.
1. Intersegmental interneurons (INs) that participate in the larval bending reflex and the pupal gin trap closure reflex were identified in the isolated ventral nerve cord of Manduca sexta. INs 305, 504, and 703 show qualitatively different responses in the pupa than in the larva to electrical stimulation of sensory neurons that are retained during the larval-pupal transition to serve both reflexes. Action potentials produced by current injected into the 3 interneurons excite motor neurons that are directly involved in the larval and pupal reflexes. The excitation of the motor neurons is not associated with EPSPs at a fixed latency following action potentials in the interneurons, and thus there do not seem to be direct synaptic connections between the interneurons and the motor neurons. 2. IN 305 (Fig. 2) has a lateral soma, processes in most of the dorsal neuropil ipsilateral to the soma, and a crossing neurite that gives rise to a single contralateral descending axon. IN 305 is excited by stimulation of the sensory nerve ipsilateral to its soma in the larva and the pupa. Stimulation of the sensory nerve contralateral to its soma produces an inhibitory response in the larva, but a mixed excitatory/inhibitory response to the identical stimulus in the pupa. 3. IN 504 (Fig. 3) has a lateral soma, processes throughout most of the neuropil ipsilateral to the soma, and a crossing neurite that bifurcates to give rise to a process extending to the caudal limit of the neuropil and an ascending axon. IN 504 is excited by stimulation of the sensory nerve ipsilateral to its soma in both larvae and pupae, while the response to stimulation of the sensory nerve contralateral to its soma is inhibitory in the larva but mixed (excitatory/inhibitory) in the pupa. 4. IN 703 has a large antero-lateral soma, a neurite that extends across to the contralateral side giving rise to processes located primarily dorsally in both ipsilateral and contralateral neuropils, and two axons that ascend and descend in the connectives contralateral to the soma (Fig. 4). IN 703 responds to stimulation of the sensory nerves on either side of the ganglion, but the form of the response changes during the larval-pupal transition. In the larva, the response consists of very phasic (0-2 spikes) excitation, but in the pupa there is a prolonged excitation that greatly outlasts the stimulus (Fig. 6).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Global visual motion elicits an optomotor response of the eye that stabilizes the visual input on the retina. Here, we analyzed the neck motor system of the blowfly to understand binocular integration of visual motion information underlying a head optomotor response. We identified and characterized two cervical nerve motor neurons (called CNMN6 and CNMN7) tuned precisely to an optic flow corresponding to pitch movements of the head. By means of double recordings and dye coupling, we determined that these neurons are connected ipsilaterally to two vertical system cells (VS2 and VS3), and contralaterally to one horizontal system cell (HSS). In addition, CNMN7 turned out to be connected to the ipsilateral CNMN6 and to its contralateral counterpart. To analyze a potential function of this circuit, we performed behavioral experiments and found that the optomotor pitch response of the fly head was only observable when both eyes were intact. Thus, this neural circuit performs two visuomotor transformations: first, by integrating binocular visual information it enhances the tuning to the optic flow resulting from pitch movements of the head, and second it could assure an even head declination by coordinating the activity of the CNMN7 neurons on both sides.  相似文献   

16.
Although the behavioral repertoire of crustaceans is largely guided by visual information their visual nervous system has been little explored. In search for central mechanisms of visual integration, this study was aimed at identifying and characterizing brain neurons in the crab involved in binocular visual processing. The study was performed in the intact animal, by recording intracellularly the response to visual stimuli of neurons from one of the two optic lobes. Identified neurons recorded from the medulla (second optic neuropil), which include sustaining neurons, dimming neurons, depolarizing and hyperpolarizing tonic neurons and on-off neurons, all presented exclusively monocular (ipsilateral) responses. In contrast, all wide field movement detector neurons recorded from the lobula (third optic neuropil) responded to moving stimuli presented to the ipsilateral and to the contralateral eye. In these cells, the responses evoked by ipsilateral or contralateral stimulation were almost identical, as revealed by analysing the number and amplitude of the elicited postsynaptic potentials and spikes, and the ability to habituate upon repeated visual stimulation. The results demonstrate that in crustaceans important binocular processing takes place at the level of the lobula.  相似文献   

17.
The passive membrane properties of the tangential cells in the fly lobula plate (CH, HS, and VS cells, Fig. 1) were determined by combining compartmental modeling and current injection experiments. As a prerequisite, we built a digital base of the cells by 3D-reconstructing individual tangential cells from cobalt-stained material including both CH cells (VCH and DCH cells), all three HS cells (HSN, HSE, and HSS cells) and most members of the VS cell family (Figs. 2, 3). In a first series of experiments, hyperpolarizing and depolarizing currents were injected to determine steady-state I-V curves (Fig. 4). At potentials more negative than resting, a linear relationship holds, whereas at potentials more positive than resting, an outward rectification is observed. Therefore, in all subsequent experiments, when a sinusoidal current of variable frequency was injected, a negative DC current was superimposed to keep the neurons in a hyperpolarized state. The resulting amplitude and phase spectra revealed an average steady-state input resistance of 4 to 5 M and a cut-off frequency between 40 and 80 Hz (Fig. 5). To determine the passive membrane parameters R m (specific membrane resistance), R i (specific internal resistivity), and C m (specific membrane capacitance), the experiments were repeated in computer simulations on compartmental models of the cells (Fig. 6). Good fits between experimental and simulation data were obtained for the following values: R m = 2.5 kcm2, R i = 60 cm, and C m = 1.5 F/cm2 for CH cells; R m = 2.0 kcm2, R i = 40 cm, and C m = 0.9 F/cm2 for HS cells; R m = 2.0 kcm2, R i = 40 cm, and C m = 0.8 F/cm2 for VS cells. An error analysis of the fitting procedure revealed an area of confidence in the R m -R i plane within which the R m -R i value pairs are still compatible with the experimental data given the statistical fluctuations inherent in the experiments (Figs. 7, 8). We also investigated whether there exist characteristic differences between different members of the same cell class and how much the exact placement of the electrode (within ±100 m along the axon) influences the result of the simulation (Fig. 9). The membrane parameters were further examined by injection of a hyperpolarizing current pulse (Fig. 10). The resulting compartmental models (Fig. 11) based on the passive membrane parameters determined in this way form the basis of forthcoming studies on dendritic integration and signal propagation in the fly tangential cells (Haag et al., 1997; Haag and Borst, 1997).  相似文献   

18.
Recent behavioural studies have demonstrated that honeybees use visual feedback to stabilize their gaze. However, little is known about the neural circuits that perform the visual motor computations that underlie this ability. We investigated the motor neurons that innervate two neck muscles (m44 and m51), which produce stabilizing yaw movements of the head. Intracellular recordings were made from five (out of eight) identified neuron types in the first cervical nerve (IK1) of honeybees. Two motor neurons that innervate muscle 51 were found to be direction-selective, with a preference for horizontal image motion from the contralateral to the ipsilateral side of the head. Three neurons that innervate muscle 44 were tuned to detect motion in the opposite direction (from ipsilateral to contralateral). These cells were binocularly sensitive and responded optimally to frontal stimulation. By combining the directional tuning of the motor neurons in an opponent manner, the neck motor system would be able to mediate reflexive optomotor head turns in the direction of image motion, thus stabilising the retinal image. When the dorsal ocelli were covered, the spontaneous activity of neck motor neurons increased and visual responses were modified, suggesting an ocellar input in addition to that from the compound eyes.  相似文献   

19.
Neuromuscular unit (NMU) spikes activated during the tonic vibration reflex (TVR) in man were studied by means of the cross-correlogram test. Those NMUs which preferredly fired at some definite interval with good correlation with vibration were called "locked" spikes. The amount above zero correlation level seen in the cross-correlogram was expressed as ipsilateral "excitatory frequency", Ef. TVR contraction of the ipsilateral quadriceps femoris muscle was stimulated by voluntary contraction of the contralateral quadriceps femoris. I. Cross-correlogram test of the contralateral voluntary NMU spikes with ipsilateral vibration revealed "contralateral inhibitory modulation". Such inhibitory modulation was observed in 24% of the contralateral NMUs during voluntary tracking contraction with visual feed-back and in 22% of NMUs during blind simulated contraction without visual feed-back. The "subtracted" amount, i.e., contralateral inhibitory modulation, was also expressed as the contralateral "inhibitory frequency", If, which was calculated from the indentations of the cross-correlogram. 2. When varied vibratory frequency was applied to the muscle both Ef and If attained their maximum value around an "optimal frequency" of vibration, i.e., 80-95 HZ. 3. The ratio Ef/If was proposed as the reciprocal co-activation ratio which was fairly independent of the change of vibratory frequency. An average value of Ef/If ratio was calculated at 2.2 +/- 0.9 from 19 experiments.  相似文献   

20.
How is binocular motion information integrated in the bilateral network of wide-field motion-sensitive neurons, called lobula plate tangential cells (LPTCs), in the visual system of flies? It is possible to construct an accurate model of this network because a complete picture of synaptic interactions has been experimentally identified. We investigated the cooperative behavior of the network of horizontal LPTCs underlying the integration of binocular motion information and the information representation in the bilateral LPTC network through numerical simulations on the network model. First, we qualitatively reproduced rotational motion-sensitive response of the H2 cell previously reported in vivo experiments and ascertained that it could be accounted for by the cooperative behavior of the bilateral network mainly via interhemispheric electrical coupling. We demonstrated that the response properties of single H1 and Hu cells, unlike H2 cells, are not influenced by motion stimuli in the contralateral visual hemi-field, but that the correlations between these cell activities are enhanced by the rotational motion stimulus. We next examined the whole population activity by performing principal component analysis (PCA) on the population activities of simulated LPTCs. We showed that the two orthogonal patterns of correlated population activities given by the first two principal components represent the rotational and translational motions, respectively, and similar to the H2 cell, rotational motion produces a stronger response in the network than does translational motion. Furthermore, we found that these population-coding properties are strongly influenced by the interhemispheric electrical coupling. Finally, to test the generality of our conclusions, we used a more simplified model and verified that the numerical results are not specific to the network model we constructed.  相似文献   

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