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1.
Summary European grassfrogs (Rana temporaria) were stimulated with pulsed sinusoidal, vertical vibrations (10–300 Hz) and the responses of 46 single midbrain neurons were recorded in awake, immobilized animals.Most units (40) had simple V-shaped excitatory vibrational tuning curves. The distribution of best frequencies (BF's) was bimodal with peaks at 10 and 100 Hz and the thresholds ranged from 0.02 to 1.28cm/s2 at the BF.Twenty-three neurons showed phasic-tonic and 11 neurons phasic responses. The dynamic range of seismic intensity for most neurons was 20–30 dB.In contrast to the sharp phase-locking in peripheral vibration-sensitive fibers, no phase-locking to the sinusoidal wave-form was seen in the midbrain neurons. The midbrain cells did not respond at low stimulus intensities (below 0.01–0.02 cm/s2) where a clear synchronization response occurs in saccular fibers.Six midbrain neurons had more complex response characteristics expressed by inhibition of their spontaneous activity by vibration or by bi-and trimodal sensory sensitivities.In conclusion, the vibration sensitive cells in the midbrain of the grassfrog can encode the frequency, intensity, onset and cessation of vibration stimuli. Seismic stimuli probably play a role in communication and detection of predators and the vibration-sensitive midbrain neurons may be involved in the central processing of such behaviorally significant stimuli.Abbreviation BF best frequency  相似文献   

2.
1.  Responses of 73 fibers to dorso-ventral vibration were recorded in the saccular and utricular branchlets of Rana pipiens pipiens using a ventral approach. The saccular branchlet contained nearly exclusively vibration-sensitive fibers (33 out of 36) with best frequencies (BFs) between 10 and 70 Hz, whereas none of the 37 fibers encountered in the utricular branchlet responded to dorso-ventral vibrations.
2.  Using a dorsal approach we recorded from the VIIIth nerve near its entry in the brainstem and analyzed responses to both sound and vibration stimuli for 65 fibers in R. pipiens pipiens and 25 fibers in Leptodactylus albilabris. The fibers were classified as amphibian papilla (AP), basilar papilla (BP), saccular or vestibular fibers based on their location in the nerve. Only AP and saccular fibers responded to vibrations. The AP-fibers responded to vibrations from 0.01 cm/s2 and to sound from 40 dB SPL by increasing their spike rate. Best frequencies (BFs) ranged from 60 to 900 Hz, and only fibers with BFs below 500 Hz responded to vibrations. The fibers had identical BF's for sound and vibration. The saccular fibers had BFs ranging from 10 to 80 Hz with 22 fibers having BFs at 40–50 Hz. The fibers responded to sound from 70 dB SPL and'to vibrations from 0.01 cm/s2.
3.  No differences in sensitivity, tuning or phase-locking were found between the two species, except that most BP-fibers in R. pipiens pipiens had BFs from 1.2 to 1.4 kHz, whereas those in L. albilabris had BFs from 2.0 to 2.2 kHz (matching the energy peak of L. albilabris' mating call).
4.  The finding that the low-frequency amphibian papilla fibers are extremely sensitive to vibrations raises questions regarding their function in the behaving animal. They may be substrate vibration receptors, respond to sound-induced vibrations or bone-conducted sound.
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3.
Direct stimulation of the frog's saccular macula shows that the saccular fibers are sensitive to vibrations between 10(-1) (at least) and 8.10(3) Hz and that their response depends on 1) the frequency of the vibration, 2) the origin of the fiber in the macula.  相似文献   

4.
We have studied the sound and vibration sensitivity of 164 amphibian papilla fibers in the VIIIth nerve of the grassfrog, Rana temporaria. The VIIIth nerve was exposed using a dorsal approach. The frogs were placed in a natural sitting posture and stimulated by free-field sound. Furthermore, the animals were stimulated with dorso-ventral vibrations, and the sound-induced vertical vibrations in the setup could be canceled by emitting vibrations in antiphase from the vibration exciter. All low-frequency fibers responded to both sound and vibration with sound thresholds from 23 dB SPL and vibration thresholds from 0.02 cm/s2. The sound and vibration sensitivity was compared for each fiber using the offset between the rate-level curves for sound and vibration stimulation as a measure of relative vibration sensitivity. When measured in this way relative vibration sensitivity decreases with frequency from 42 dB at 100 Hz to 25 dB at 400 Hz. Since sound thresholds decrease from 72 dB SPL at 100 Hz to 50 dB SPL at 400 Hz the decrease in relative vibration sensitivity reflects an increase in sound sensitivity with frequency, probably due to enhanced tympanic sensitivity at higher frequencies. In contrast, absolute vibration sensitivity is constant in most of the frequency range studied. Only small effects result from the cancellation of sound-induced vibrations. The reason for this probably is that the maximal induced vibrations in the present setup are 6–10 dB below the fibers' vibration threshold at the threshold for sound. However, these results are only valid for the present physical configuration of the setup and the high vibration-sensitivities of the fibers warrant caution whenever the auditory fibers are stimulated with free-field sound. Thus, the experiments suggest that the low-frequency sound sensitivity is not caused by sound-induced vertical vibrations. Instead, the low-frequency sound sensitivity is either tympanic or mediated through bone conduction or sound-induced pulsations of the lungs.Abbreviations AP amphibian papilla - BF best frequency - PST peristimulus time  相似文献   

5.
Auditory and vestibular functions of otolithic organs vary among vertebrate taxa. The saccule has been considered a major hearing organ in many fishes. However, little is known about the auditory role of the lagena in fishes. In this study we analyzed directional and frequency responses from single lagenar fibers of Dormitator latifrons to linear accelerations that simulate underwater acoustic particle motion. Characteristic frequencies of the lagenar fibers fell into two groups: 50 Hz and 80–125 Hz. We observed various temporal response patterns: strong phase-locking, double phase-locking, phase-locked bursting, and non-phase-locked bursting. Some bursting responses have not been previously observed in vertebrate otolithic nerve fibers. Lagenar fibers could respond to accelerations as small as 1.1 mm s–2. Like saccular fibers, lagenar fibers were directionally responsive and decreased directional selectivity with stimulus level. Best response axes of the lagenar fibers clustered around the lagenar longitudinal axis in the horizontal plane, but distributed in a diversity of axes in the mid-sagittal plane, which generally reflect morphological polarizations of hair cells in the lagena. We conclude that the lagena of D. latifrons plays a role in sound localization in elevation, particularly at high stimulus intensities where responses of most saccular fibers are saturated.Abbreviations BRA best response axis/axes - BS best sensitivity - CF characteristic frequency - CV coefficient of variation - DI directionality index - ISIH inter-spike interval histogram - PSTH peri-stimulus time histogram - SR spontaneous rate  相似文献   

6.
Summary The effect of temperature on the response properties of primary auditory fibres in caiman was studied. The head temperature was varied over the range of 10–35 ° C while the body was kept at a standard temperature of 27 °C (Ts). The temperature effects observed on auditory afferents were fully reversible. Below 11 °C the neural firing ceased.The mean spontaneous firing rate increased nearly linearly with temperature. The slopes in different fibres ranged from 0.2–3.5 imp s–1 °C–1. A bimodal distribution of mean spontaneous firing rate was found (<20 imp s–1 and >20 imp s–1 at Ts) at all temperatures.The frequency-intensity response area of the primary fibres shifted uniformly with temperature. The characteristic frequency (CF) increased nearly linearly with temperature. The slopes in different fibres ranged from 3–90 Hz °C–1. Expressed in octaves the CF-change varied in each fibre from about O.14oct °C–1 at 15 °C to about 0.06 oct °C–1 at 30 °C, irrespective of the fibre's CF at Ts. Thresholds were lowest near Ts. Below Ts the thresholds decreased on average by 2dB°C–1, above Ts the thresholds rose rapidly with temperature. The sharpness of tuning (Q10db) showed no major change in the temperature range tested.Comparison of these findings with those from other lower vertebrates and from mammals shows that only mammalian auditory afferents do not shift their CF with temperature, suggesting that a fundamental difference in mammalian and submammalian tuning mechanisms exists. This does not necessarily imply that there is a single unifying tuning mechanism for all mammals and another one for non-mammals.Abbreviations BF best frequency: frequency of maximal response at an intensity 10 dB above the CF-threshold - CF characteristic frequency - FTC frequency threshold curve, tuning curve - T s standard temperature of 27 °C  相似文献   

7.
We present results from in vitro and in vivo studies of response properties of neurons in the saccular and caudal nuclei in the frog. In the in vitro studies the saccular nerve of the isolated brain was stimulated with electrical pulses. In the in vivo experiments, the neurons were stimulated by dorso-ventral vibrations of the intact animal. We identified six response types: (1) primary-like cells with short latencies and follow repetition rates up to 100 Hz; (2) phasic cells responding only to the first pulse in a train; (3) bursting cells firing several spikes in response to any stimulation; (4) late responders with very long latencies; (5) integrator cells showing facilitated responses, and (6) inhibitory cells inhibited by saccular nerve stimulation.The cells have comparable sensitivity and frequency characteristics to the primary fibres (BF 10-80 Hz, thresholds from 0.01 cm/s2) and enable a sophisticated analysis of vibrational stimuli.  相似文献   

8.
The effect of magnesium ions, L-glutamate (L-GLU), and the diethyl ester of glutamic acid (DEE-GLU) on temperature and electrical sensitivity of the ampullae of Lorenzini in skates was studied by the method of perfusion of the basal membrane of electroreceptor cells and recording spike activity from single nerve fibers. Addition of 10–4–10–5 M L-GLU to the solution was shown to cause an increase in the spontaneous discharge frequency of receptors with low initial level of activity (8–20 spikes/sec) and a decrease in receptors with spontaneous activity of 22–42 spikes/sec. In solution with an increased magnesium ion concentration (15–50 mM) both spontaneous and evoked receptor activity was blocked, Under these conditions the addition of L-GLU to the solution caused partial recovery of spontaneous receptor activity. Reversible blocking of spontaneous and evoked receptor activity was observed in a solution containing 10–4–10–3 M DEE-GLU. It is suggested that L-GLU is the synaptic transmitter in the ampullae of Lorenzini of the skate.I. P. Pavlov Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 13, No. 3, pp. 292–298, May–June, 1981.  相似文献   

9.
The number of spikes which must be recorded in order to detect significant correlation between spike trains of two synaptically connected neurons was estimated by a mathematical model. Dependence of this number of spikes on importance of interneuronal connection (measured as the amplitude of the EPSP evoked by a single spike of the input neuron in the output cell) and on the intensity of total spontaneous excitatory influences on the output neuron and on its own parameters was studied. For cells which corresponded in the weight of connections between them, their intrinsic parameters, and characteristics of spontaneous activity to real spinal neurons, the necessary number of spikes was 107–108. An increase in amplitude of the single EPSP and also a decrease in the intensity of the input spontaneous spike train and parameters of after-hyperpolarization of the postsynaptic neuron led to a decrease in the number of spikes necessary for the detection of significant correlation. On the basis of the results of this and previous investigations the possible principles for construction of a spinal locomotor generator are discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 12, No. 3, pp. 290–296, May–June, 1980.  相似文献   

10.
We studied the directionality of spike rate responses of auditory nerve fibers of the grassfrog, Rana temporaria, to pure tone stimuli. All auditory fibers showed spike rate directionality. The strongest directionality was seen at low frequencies (200 – 400 Hz), where the spike rate could change by up to nearly 200␣spikes s−1. with sound direction. At higher frequencies the directional spike rate changes were mostly below 100 spikes s−1. In equivalent dB SPL terms (calculated using the fibers' rate-intensity curves) the maximum directionalities were up to 15 dB at low frequencies and below 10 dB at higher frequencies. Two types of directional patterns were observed. At frequencies below 500 Hz relatively strong responses were evoked by stimuli from the ipsilateral (+90o) and contralateral (−90o) directions while the weakest responses were evoked by stimuli from frontal (0o or +30o) or posterior (−135o) directions. At frequencies above 800 Hz the strongest responses were evoked by stimuli from the ipsilateral direction while gradually weaker responses were seen as the sound direction shifted towards the contralateral side. At frequencies between 500 and 800 Hz both directional patterns were seen. The directionality was highly intensity dependent. No special adaptations for localization of conspecific calls were found. Accepted: 23 November 1996  相似文献   

11.
Summary Classical conditioning was employed to test the sensitivity of cephalopods to vibrations between 1 and 100 Hz generated in a standing wave acoustic tube. The animals were trained to associate sound stimuli with a weak electric shock, and the recorded conditioned responses were changes in breathing and jetting activity. Five specimens of Sepia officinalis were tested, and all responded to these low frequency sounds. The relevant stimulus parameter was particle motion rather than sound pressure. The threshold values (measured as particle acceleration) decreased towards lower frequencies in the tested range, reaching values below 4 × 10-3 m/s2. The thresholds in the most sensitive range may have been masked by the considerable background noise at the experimental site (Naples). Two individuals of Octopus vulgaris and one Loligo vulgaris were also tested, and showed a similar sensitivity to low frequency sound.  相似文献   

12.
The response characteristics of the vibration receptors in the legs of the migratory locust, Locusta migratoria, and the tettigoniid Decticus verrucivorus were investigated electro-physiologically by single cell recordings. The legs were stimulated by sinusoidal vibrations. There are four types of vibration receptor in each leg of Locusta and Decticus, which can be classified physiologically. One type—most probably campaniform sensilla—shows a phase-locked response to vibrations from 30 to 200 Hz, its threshold reflecting the displacement. A second type shows similar responses in the same frequency range, but its reactions depend on the stimulus acceleration. The receptor cells of the subgenual organ are very sensitive to vibration from 30 to at least 5000 Hz, and their responses depend on acceleration. There are two types of subgenual receptors, one of which shows a clear maximum of sensitivity between 200 and 1000 Hz, with a threshold below 0.01 m/sec?2 acceleration. Subgenual receptors with different thresholds and different characteristic frequencies occur in each leg. The receptors of each leg pair have quite similar mean sensitivities and characteristic frequencies. However, in the front legs of tettigoniids the more sensitive subgenual receptors and an additional receptor type also respond to low-frequency airborne sound up to 10 kHz.  相似文献   

13.
Summary The activity of single vibration-sensitive neurons in the leg nerve of the fiddler crabUca pugilator was recorded extracellularly. All units recorded from fall into two groups according to basic differences in their spectral threshold curves. The first type of neuron can be excited over a broad frequency range (ca. 2–2,000 Hz) with minimal threshold at 15–30 Hz with 0.5–1.0 cm/s2 (peak). The second type of neuron, in contrast to the first one spontaneously active, is excited only in the frequency range 2–100 Hz and shows a decrease in the nerve impulse rate at vibration frequencies up to 2 kHz. The intensity necessary for complete suppression of the firing activity is 80 cm/s2 at 800 Hz, the range of frequency most sensitive for inhibition.  相似文献   

14.
The characteristics of water diffusional permeability (P) of human red blood cells were studied on isolated erythrocytes by a doping nuclear magnetic resonance technique. In order to estimate the basal permeability the maximal inhibition of water diffusion was induced by exposure of red blood cells to p-chloromercuribenzene sulfonate (PCMBS) under various conditions (concentration, duration, temperature). The lowest values of P were around 0.7×10–3 cm s–1 at 10°C, 1.2×10–3 cm s–1 at 15°C, 1.4×10–3 cm s–1 at 20°C, 1.8×10–3 cm s–1 at 25°C, 2.1×10–3 cm s–1 at 30°C and 3.5×10–3 cm s–1 at 37°C. The mean value of the activation energy of water diffusion (Ea,d) was 25 kJ/mol for control and 43.7 kJ/mol for PCMBS-inhibited erythrocytes. The values of P and Ea,d obtained after induction of maximal inhibition of water diffusion by PCMBS can be taken as references for the basal permeability to water of the human red blood cell membrane.  相似文献   

15.
We examined the mechanisms that underlie band-suppression amplitude modulation selectivity in the auditory midbrain of anurans. Band-suppression neurons respond well to low (5–10 Hz) and high (>70 Hz) rates of sinusoidal amplitude modulation, but poorly, if at all, to intermediate rates. The effectiveness of slow rates of sinusoidal amplitude modulation is due to the long duration of individual pulses; short-duration pulses (<10 ms) failed to elicit spikes when presented at 5–10 pulses s–1. Each unit responded only after a threshold number of pulses (median=3, range=2–5) were delivered at an optimal rate. The salient stimulus feature was the number of consecutive interpulse intervals that were within a cell-specific tolerance. This interval-integrating process could be reset by a single long interval, even if preceded by a suprathreshold number of intervals. These findings indicate that band-suppression units are a subset of interval-integrating neurons. Band-suppression neurons differed from band-pass interval-integrating cells in having lower interval-number thresholds and broader interval tolerance. We suggest that these properties increase the probability of a postsynaptic spike, given a particular temporal pattern of afferent action potentials in response to long-duration pulses, i.e., predispose them to respond to slow rates of amplitude modulation. Modeling evidence is provided that supports this conclusion.Abbreviations AM amplitude modulation - PRR pulse repetition rate - SAM sinusoidal amplitude modulation  相似文献   

16.
It is unknown whether the fish utricle contributes to directional hearing. Here, we report response properties of single utricular fibers in a teleost fish (Dormitator latifrons) to linear accelerations at various stimulus frequencies and axes. Characteristic frequencies ranged from 50–400 Hz (median=80 Hz), and best frequencies shifted from 50 to 250 Hz with stimulus level. Best sensitivity of utricular fibers was distributed from –70 to –40 dB re: 1 g (mean=–52 dB), which is about 30 dB less sensitive than saccular fibers. Q50% fell between 0.16 and 11.50 (mean=2.04) at 15 dB above threshold. We observed temporal response patterns of entrained phase-locking, double phase-locking, phase-locked bursting, and non-phase-locked bursting. Most utricular fibers were directionally selective with various directional response profiles, and directional selectivity was stimulus-level dependent. Horizontal best-response axes were distributed in a 152° range while mid-sagittal best-response axes were clustered around the fish longitudinal axis, which is consistent with the horizontal orientation of the utricle and morphological polarizations of utricular hair cells. Therefore, results of this study indicate that the utricle in this vertebrate plays an auditory role in azimuth and that utricular fibers extend the response dynamic range of this species in directional hearing.  相似文献   

17.
An artificial phosphotriesterase (PTE) was constructed by co-polymerization of 4(5)-vinylimidazole-Zn2+-methacrylic acid cluster with a divinylbenzene polymer. Compared with the spontaneous hydrolysis, the resulting polymer catalyst caused 105-fold rate acceleration towards the hydrolysis of diethyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate (Paraoxon). The catalytic activity of the polymer catalyst could be enhanced for 30% using molecular imprinting technique and the molecularly-imprinted catalyst (MIC) showed a turnover rate of 7.4×10–2 s–1 towards the hydrolysis of Paraoxon. The MIC also hydrolyzed thiophosphates and phosphorothiolate triester pesticides. Construction of an amperometric sensor employing the MIC as catalyst achieved a detection limit of 0.1 mM Paraoxon.  相似文献   

18.
Small sinusoidal vibrations at 300 Hz were applied to frog sartorius muscle to measure the dynamic stiffness (Young's modulus) throughout the course of tetanus. For a peak-to-peak amplitude of 0.4% the dynamic Young's modulus increased from 1.5×105 Nm–2 in the resting state to 2×107 Nm–2 in tetanus. After correction for the external connective tissue, the dynamic Young's modulus of the muscle was almost directly proportional to the tension throughout the development of tetanus. The ratio of dynamic Young's modulus to tensile stress thus remained constant (with a value at 300 Hz of approximately 100), consistently with Huxley and Simmons' identification of the crossbridges as the source of both tension and stiffness.For a single crossbridge the ratio of stiffness to tension was 8.2×107 m–1 at 300 Hz; it is deduced from literature data that the limiting value at high frequencies is about 1.6×108 m–1. This ratio is interpreted on Harrington's (1971) model to show that crossbridge action can be explained by a helix-coil transition of about 80 out of the 260 residues in each S-2 myosin strand. It is also shown that a helix-coil model can account for the observed rapid relaxation of muscle without invoking any complex behaviour of the crossbridge head.  相似文献   

19.
Escape performance was examined in three similarly sized teleosts caught in Arctic waters: the Atlantic cod, Gadus morhua, the Greenland cod, Gadus ogac, and the short-horned sculpin, Myoxocephalus scorpius. Escape responses were elicited by a mechanical stimulus and followed by recordings of velocity and acceleration over the first 320 ms. A significant difference in escape performance was confirmed between the three species. G. morhua always exhibited the fastest and M. scorpius the slowest responses. Maximal measures of acceleration and velocity revealed no difference between G. morhua (12.6 m s–2 and 1.27 m s–1) and G. ogac (11.9 m s–2 and 1.16 m s–1) but an overall reduced performance in M. scorpius (6.5 m s–2 and 0.71 m s–1). The escape performance of the gadid and cottid species generally correlate well with their behavioural lifestyle, but it is surprisingly similar to Antarctic notothenioid fishes at lower temperatures.  相似文献   

20.
Hair cells in the basal, high frequency region (>1100 Hz) of the chicken cochlea were destroyed with kanamycin (400 mg/kg/d × 10 d) and allowed to regenerate. Afterwards, single unit recordings were made from cochlear ganglion neurons at various times post-treatment. During the first few weeks post-treatment, only neurons with low characteristic frequencies (<1100 Hz) responded to sound. Despite the fact that the low frequency region of the cochlea was not destroyed, neurons with low characteristic frequencies had elevated thresholds, abnormally broad U-shaped or W-shaped tuning curves and low spontaneous discharge rates. At 2 days post-treatment, the spontaneous discharge rates of some acoustically unresponsive units fluctuated in a rhythmical manner. As recovery time increased, thresholds decreased, tuning curves narrowed and developed a symmetrical V-shape, spontaneous rate increased and neurons with higher characteristic frequencies began to respond to sound. In addition, the proportion of interspike interval histograms with regularly spaced peaks increased. These improvements progressed along a low-to-high characteristic frequency gradient. By 10–20 weeks post-treatment, the thresholds and tuning curves of neurons with characteristic frequencies below 2000 Hz were within normal limits; however, the spontaneous discharge rates of the neurons were still significantly lower than those from normal animals.Abbreviations KM kanamycin - BrdU bromodeoxyuridine - CF characteristic frequency - CAP compound action potential - ISI interspike interval  相似文献   

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