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1.
The cochleotopic organization of the primary auditory cortex was studied by the evoked potentials method in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital. Two foci of maximal activity (dorsal and ventral) were found in the primary auditory cortex of 85% of animals during local electrical stimulation of different areas of the cochlea. Analysis of projection maps of the primary auditory cortex of the cats showed that different areas of the cochlea are presented in this region disproportionately. The basal portion projects to a larger cortical surface than the middle and apical portions together, evidence of inequality of representation of different parts of the receptor apparatus of the cochlea in the primary auditory area. Considerable differences were observed in the arrangement of projections of the cochlea in the primary auditory cortex of different animals.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 11, No. 2, pp. 117–124, March–April, 1979.  相似文献   

2.
The location and morphological profile of auditory cortex neurons projecting to the medial geniculate body were investigated in adult cats using horseradish peroxidase retrograde axonal transport techniques. Sources of descending projections to the medial geniculate body from auditory cortex areas I and II were found to be neurons belonging to deep-lying layers (layer VI and layer V to a lesser extent). By far the majority of corticogeniculate neurons in the auditory cortex were pyramidal cells. In layer VI of the primary auditory area (A1), the number of corticogeniculate neurons reaches 60% of all cells belonging to that layer. The average area (M±m) of the profile of perikarya of corticogeniculate neurons in layer VI, area Al equaled 139.3±2.5 µm2 and 219.5±7.0 µm2 in layer V neurons; average size of long diameter: 15.0±0.19 and 18.3±0.4 µm respectively. The lower regions of layers III and IV in area Al were found to be the termination point of the greater mass of anterogradely-labeled geniculocortical fibers (terminals of relay neuron axons belonging to the medial geniculate body).A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 21, No. 4, July–August, pp. 513–521, 1989.  相似文献   

3.
The effect of stimulation of cortical association (orbito-frontal, parietal) and projection (auditory, sensomotor) areas on the activity of Purkinje neurons of the cerebellar cortex was studied in adult cats anesthetized with pentobarbital, with or without chloralose. These responses were compared with those to peripheral stimuli. Definite similarity was found between the responses of Purkinje cells to different cortical (association and projection) stimuli as regards both the types of responses of the neurons and their ability to respond. No similarity was observed in the responses of Purkinje cells to peripheral (visual, auditory, electrodermal) stimulation. Whereas almost identical numbers of neurons (over 50%) were excited in response to the different forms of cortical stimulation, the ability of the neurons to respond to peripheral stimuli differed considerably: 44.6% of neurons responded to electrodermal stimulation, 34.2% to auditory, and 18.8% to visual.Medical Institute, Kemerovo. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 8, No. 5, pp. 483–489, September–October, 1976.  相似文献   

4.
Influence of electrical stimulation of the medial preoptic area of cats on characteristics of paradoxical sleep and activity of medial preoptic neurons were studied in the course of sleep-waking cycle. Low-frequency stimulation of this structure in the state of slow-wave sleep evoked short-latency electrocortical desynchronization and induced transition to paradoxical sleep or paradocical sleep-like state. The same stimulation during the whole period of paradoxical sleep results in a reduction of its duration, practically complete disappearance of tonic stage, and increase in the density of rapid eye movements in phasic stage. The vast majority of meurons in the medial preoptic area decreased their firing rates during quiet waking and slow-wave sleep and dramatically increased their activity during paradoxical sleep. More than 50% of such neurons displayed activation 20-70 s prior to the appearance of electrocorticographic correlates of paradoxical sleep. Some neurons were selectively active during paradoxical sleep. Approximately 50% of cells increased their firing rates a few seconds prior to and/or during series of rapid eye movements. The results suggest that the medial preoptic area contains the units of the executive system (network) of paradoxical sleep and are involved in the mechanisms of neocortical desynchronization.  相似文献   

5.
The goal of the pilot study was to analyze the characteristics of changes in short EEG segments recorded from 32 sites during perception of musical melodies by healthy subjects depending on logical (recognition) and emotional (pleasant/unpleasant) estimation of the melody. For this purpose, the changes in event-related synchronization/desynchronization and the indices of wavelet synchrony of EEG responses were compared in 31 healthy subjects (18 to 60 years old). It has been shown that melody recognition during logical estimation of music is accompanied by event-related desynchronization in the left frontal-parietal-temporal area. Emotional estimation of a melody is characterized by event-related synchronization in the left frontal-temporal area for pleasant melodies, desynchronization in the temporal area for unpleasant melodies, and desynchronization in the occipital area for melodies inducing no emotional response. The analysis of EEG wavelet synchronization characterizing reactive changes in the interaction between cortical areas shows that the most distinct topographic differences are associated with the type of music processing: logical (familiar/unfamiliar) or emotional (pleasant/unpleasant). The changes in interhemispheric connections between the associative cortical areas (central, frontal, temporal) are greater during emotional estimation, while the changes in inter- and intrahemispheric connections between the projection areas of the acoustic analyzer (temporal area) are greater during logical estimation. It is assumed that the revealed event-related synchronization/desynchronization is most likely to reflect the activation component of musical fragment estimation, whereas wavelet analysis provides insight into the character of musical stimulus processing.  相似文献   

6.
Previous studies have demonstrated that despite its blindness, the subterranean blind mole rat (Spalax ehrenbergi) possesses a noticeable lateral geniculate nucleus and a typical cyto-architectural occipital cortex that are reciprocally connected. These two areas, as revealed by the metabolic tracer 2-deoxyglucose, are activated by auditory stimuli. Using single unit recordings, we show that about 57% of 325 cells located within the occipital cortex of anesthetized mole rats responded to at least one of the following auditory stimuli — white noise, pure tones, clicks, and amplitude modulated tones — with the latter two being the most effective. About 85% of cells driven by either contralateral or ipsilateral stimulation also responded to binaural stimulation; about 13% responded only to binaural stimulation; and 2% were driven exclusively by contralateral stimulation. Comparing responsiveness and response strength to these three modes of stimulation revealed a contralateral predominance. Mean latency (±SD) of ipsilateral and contralateral responses were 48.5±32.6 ms and 33.5±9.4 ms, respectively. Characteristic frequencies could be divided into two distinct subgroups ranging between 80 and 125 Hz and between 2,500 and 4,400 Hz, corresponding to the most intensive spectral components of the vibratory intraspecific communication signals and airborne vocalizations.Abbreviations BMF best modulation frequency - CF characteristic frequency - 2-DG 2-deoxyglucose - dLGN dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus - IC inferior colliculus - LGN lateral geniculate nucleus - OC occipital cortex - MTF modulation transfer function - SAM sinusoidally amplitude modulation - SC superior colliculus  相似文献   

7.
Spontaneous unit activity in association area 5 and some projection areas of the cortex (first somatosensory, first and second auditory areas) were studied in cats immobilized with D-tubocurarine in which the index of specific spontaneous activity, the mean frequency, types of spontaneous activity, and statistical parameters — distribution of interspike intervals and autocorrelation function — were determined. The results showed that spontaneous unit activity in the association area differs from that in the projection areas in both intensity and character. A special feature of the spontaneous activity of the auditory areas was a well-marked volley distribution of activity. In the somatosensory area the level of spontaneous activity as reflected in all indices was the lowest. In the association cortex the largest number of neurons with spontaneous activity lay at a depth of 500–1000 µ corresponding to cortical layers III–IV. In the first auditory area neurons with spontaneous activity were concentrated at a depth of 1400 µ (layer V) and in the somatosensory area at a depth of 1000–1400 µ (alyers IV–V). The possible functional significance of these differences is discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 8, No. 1, pp. 13–21, January–February, 1976.  相似文献   

8.
The interhemispheric difference in the level of EEG activation was studied as a correlate of the efficiency of human probabilistic activity. The interhemispheric asymmetry of the arousal duration in the projection (occipital) and associative (central) areas was assessed in two tested groups of subjects: with an adequate prediction and difficulties in predictive activity under conditions of different information significance of a stimulus. Under conditions of relevant stimulation, the asymmetry coefficient was higher, and the desynchronization reaction in the central areas of the left hemisphere was considerably shorter in bad predictors than in good ones. It is suggested that the asymmetry observed in bad predictors is determined by a nonspecific activation of subcortical structures, and in good predictors the asymmetry is related with the local neocortical activation.  相似文献   

9.
Changes in evoked potentials in the first visual (VI), first somatic (SI), and parietal areas of the cortex during local cooling of each area were investigated under pentobarbital anesthesia. Two types of interaction were distinguished. Type I interaction was found in all areas in the early stages of local cooling and was reflected in a similar decrease in amplitude of evoked potentials in intact parts of the cortex. In the thalamic association nuclei — the pulvinar and posterolateral nucleus — somatic evoked potentials were unchanged but visual were transformed differently from those in the cortex. Type IIinteraction was found in the later stages of cooling and only between the association area and each of the projection areas. It was reflected in a greater change in amplitude of the evoked potentials and also in their configuration. In response to somatic stimulation in the early stage of type II interaction transformation of evoked potentials in the cortex took place sooner than in the nuclei; in the later stage it took place immediately after transformation of the "subcortical" evoked potentials. In response to photic stimulation transformations of cortical evoked potentials were always preceded by the corresponding transformations in the nuclei. It is suggested that type I interaction is formed by intercortical connections and type II by direct and subcortical relay connections. Differences in the role of the association area in interaction of types I and II when activated by stimuli of different modalities are discussed.Brain Institute, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 10, No. 6, pp. 573–581, November–December, 1978.  相似文献   

10.
Sensory gating is a process in which the brain’s response to a repetitive stimulus is attenuated; it is thought to contribute to information processing by enabling organisms to filter extraneous sensory inputs from the environment. To date, sensory gating has typically been used to determine whether brain function is impaired, such as in individuals with schizophrenia or addiction. In healthy subjects, sensory gating is sensitive to a subject’s behavioral state, such as acute stress and attention. The cortical response to sensory stimulation significantly decreases during sleep; however, information processing continues throughout sleep, and an auditory evoked potential (AEP) can be elicited by sound. It is not known whether sensory gating changes during sleep. Sleep is a non-uniform process in the whole brain with regional differences in neural activities. Thus, another question arises concerning whether sensory gating changes are uniform in different brain areas from waking to sleep. To address these questions, we used the sound stimuli of a Conditioning-testing paradigm to examine sensory gating during waking, rapid eye movement (REM) sleep and Non-REM (NREM) sleep in different cortical areas in rats. We demonstrated the following: 1. Auditory sensory gating was affected by vigilant states in the frontal and parietal areas but not in the occipital areas. 2. Auditory sensory gating decreased in NREM sleep but not REM sleep from waking in the frontal and parietal areas. 3. The decreased sensory gating in the frontal and parietal areas during NREM sleep was the result of a significant increase in the test sound amplitude.  相似文献   

11.
A systems theoretical approach was used to compare possible functional roles of theta (4--7 Hz) and alpha (8--15 Hz) response components of brain evoked potentials. These response components were described earlier by Ba\c sar (1980). We recorded EEG and evoked potentials (EPs) from occipital scalp locations in 11 subjects. We used auditory and visual stimuli as inadequate and adequate stimuli, respectively (``cross-modality' measurements). The combined EEG-EP epochs were analysed in frequency domain with fast Fourier transform and adaptive digital filters. Alpha (8--15 Hz) response components turned out to be dependent on whether the stimulus was adequate or not (median amplitude with inadequate vs. adequate stimulation: vs. ). Theta (4--7 Hz) response components were less dependent on stimulus modality (inadequate vs. adequate stimulation: vs. ). In EP recordings the occipital alpha response almost disappeared in the first 250 ms following auditory stimulation. Comparable behaviour was observed in similar experiments with recordings from the cat visual cortex (area 17) and with occipital magnetoencephalographic recordings. Taking into account the above-mentioned previous reports on intracranial recordings in primary sensory areas of the cat brain and preliminary results of magnetoencephalographic measurements, we propose the following hypothesis: alpha responses in a time window of about 250 ms after stimulation might predominantly reflect primary sensory processing whereas the theta responses in the first 250 ms after stimulation might be more involved in supra-modality -- or cross-modality -- associative-cognitive processing. Received: 25 February 1994 / Accepted in revised form: 5 August 1994  相似文献   

12.
In acute experiments in rabbits immobilized by d-tubocurarine, stimulation of the entorhinal area with rectangular electric impulses led to the appearance of evoked potentials (EP) with a latent period of 6–12 msec in the occipital, temporal, parietal, and cingular areas of the neocortex. The amplitude of the positive response component was 500 µV, and its duration 25–50 msec. The negative component was not always discernible. When rhythmic stimulation was used, these EPs followed stimulation frequencies not exceeding 20 per sec. Stimulation of the medial parts of the entorhinal area with a frequency of one to three per sec was accompanied by recruitment of the EP in the occipital and temporal neocortex areas. Nembutal depressed the amplitude of the neocortex EP appearing in response to stimulation of the entorhinal cortex. With the aid of double stimulation it could be established that, after conditioning stimulation of the entorhinal area, the positive component of the primary response (PR) evoked by stimulation of the contralateral sciatic nerve in the projection zone of the somatosensory cortex is strengthened during the first 50 msec, and subsequently after 80–120 msec. In these cases, the negative component was depressed. These findings are discussed with a view to the influence of limbic structures on the neocortex.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 73–78, January–February, 1970.  相似文献   

13.
We combined fMRI and EEG recording to study the neurophysiological responses associated with auditory stimulation across the sleep-wake cycle. We found that presentation of auditory stimuli produces bilateral activation in auditory cortex, thalamus, and caudate during both wakefulness and nonrapid eye movement (NREM) sleep. However, the left parietal and, bilaterally, the prefrontal and cingulate cortices and the thalamus were less activated during NREM sleep compared to wakefulness. These areas may play a role in the further processing of sensory information required to achieve conscious perception during wakefulness. Finally, during NREM sleep, the left amygdala and the left prefrontal cortex were more activated by stimuli having special affective significance than by neutral stimuli. These data suggests that the sleeping brain can process auditory stimuli and detect meaningful events.  相似文献   

14.
Responses of 375 primary somatosensory cortical neurons located in the projection area of the vibrissae to electrical stimulation of the infraorbital nerve and also to adequate stimulation of the vibrissae were investigated in unanesthetized cats immobilized with tubocurarine. Stimulation of the nerve and vibrissae most frequently evoked synaptic responses in the neurons, in the form of a short EPSP followed by an IPSP or, less frequently, as a primary IPSP; during extracellular recordings corresponding changes were observed in spike activity. In response to stimulation of the vibrissae, initial inhibition was found more often than to stimulation of the nerve (in 45 and 16% of neurons respectively). The difference between the minimal values of latent periods of IPSP and EPSP evoked by stimulation of the infraorbital nerve was 0.8 msec in different neurons, and the difference between the mean values 1.4 msec. Directional sensitivity of the cortical neurons was demonstrated (to a change in the direction of deflection of the vibrissae). Neurons located close together could differ in the character of their directional sensitivity during stimulation of the same vibrissae. It is concluded that short-latency inhibition arising in the primary projection area of the cat somatosensory cortex is predominantly afferent and not recurrent. The probable mechanisms of directional sensitivity of the neurons studied are discussed.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologia, Vol. 11, No. 6, pp. 550–559, November, 1979.  相似文献   

15.
In the premature infant, somatosensory and visual stimuli trigger an immature electroencephalographic (EEG) pattern, “delta-brushes,” in the corresponding sensory cortical areas. Whether auditory stimuli evoke delta-brushes in the premature auditory cortex has not been reported. Here, responses to auditory stimuli were studied in 46 premature infants without neurologic risk aged 31 to 38 postmenstrual weeks (PMW) during routine EEG recording. Stimuli consisted of either low-volume technogenic “clicks” near the background noise level of the neonatal care unit, or a human voice at conversational sound level. Stimuli were administrated pseudo-randomly during quiet and active sleep. In another protocol, the cortical response to a composite stimulus (“click” and voice) was manually triggered during EEG hypoactive periods of quiet sleep. Cortical responses were analyzed by event detection, power frequency analysis and stimulus locked averaging. Before 34 PMW, both voice and “click” stimuli evoked cortical responses with similar frequency-power topographic characteristics, namely a temporal negative slow-wave and rapid oscillations similar to spontaneous delta-brushes. Responses to composite stimuli also showed a maximal frequency-power increase in temporal areas before 35 PMW. From 34 PMW the topography of responses in quiet sleep was different for “click” and voice stimuli: responses to “clicks” became diffuse but responses to voice remained limited to temporal areas. After the age of 35 PMW auditory evoked delta-brushes progressively disappeared and were replaced by a low amplitude response in the same location. Our data show that auditory stimuli mimicking ambient sounds efficiently evoke delta-brushes in temporal areas in the premature infant before 35 PMW. Along with findings in other sensory modalities (visual and somatosensory), these findings suggest that sensory driven delta-brushes represent a ubiquitous feature of the human sensory cortex during fetal stages and provide a potential test of functional cortical maturation during fetal development.  相似文献   

16.
In chronic experiments on rats in free behavior thermistors have been used to record the temperature of the cerebral sensomotor cortex together with recording of the EEG of the neocortex and hippocampus. The sensitivity of recording of temperature was 10–2 deg/cm. Detailed comparison of the temperature variations with changes in the EEG in "slow" and "rapid" sleep and also alertness revealed a correlation between the appearance of the hippocampal -rhythm (short bursts and long periods in the alert state and in "rapid" sleep), on the one hand, and temperature rises of greater or lesser intensity (maximum on passing from "rapid" sleep), on the other. On desynchronization of the EEG without hippocampal -synchronization no rise in temperature in the brain was observed. In "slow" sleep various forms of correlation between the EEG and the temperature of the cortex were noted: slow, smooth temperature drop developing with growth of synchronization; appearance against the background of this drop of short temperature rises the ascending phase of which corresponded to the period of rise in synchronization and a temperature drop phase corresponding to the period of desynchronization in the microcycles of slow sleep; disappearance of such temperature fluctuations after desynchronization before the onset of "rapid" sleep. Thus, the link between the fluctuations in brain temperature and its electrogenesis is of a complex character with clear correspondence between the rise in temperature and the on-set of the hippocampal -rhythm.N. I Grashchenkov Laboratory of Problems of Control of Functions in the Human and Animal Body, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 6, pp. 618–626, November–December, 1970.  相似文献   

17.
Unit activity was recorded from two parietal areas of the cat neocortex in semichronic experiments. Cell responses to presentation of adequate stimuli of different modalities and to direct electrical stimulation of various cortical zones were studied. About 4% of neurons of the Clare-Bishop area did not respond to visual stimulation. Cells responding to stimuli of different modalities were found in the Clare-Bishop area. A high percentage of cells in this area responded to direct electrical stimulation of area 17. In the association area (area 7) 27% of neurons tested responded to visual stimuli, but only a very small relative number of cells (compared with responding neurons of the Clare-Bishop area) responded to stimulation of the primary sensory areas. Electrical stimulation of area 7 inhibited evoked and spontaneous unit activity in the Clare-Bishop area. The hypothesis that these areas are the association representation of two different sections of the visual system — retino-geniculocortical and retino-tecto-thalamocortical — is discussed.Institute of Experimental Medicine, Academy of Medical Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 13, No. 6, pp. 612–620, November–December, 1981.  相似文献   

18.
Classical analysis of the spontaneous sleep EEG has revealed alterations of REM sleep in psychiatric diseases and under the influence of drugs. In order to elucidate possible functional differences between different REM episodes even in healthy subjects we investigated in 10 volunteers the transfer properties of the brain by measuring auditory (AEP) and visual evoked potentials (VEP) from scalp positions Fz, Cz and Pz during the night. According to linear system theory we computed the so-called amplitude-frequency characteristics (AFC) from averaged AEPs and VEPs during the first and each of the following 3 REM episodes. These functions describe the relationship between the input and output of the investigated system. A 3-factorial analysis of variances with the independent factors frequency band, REM episode and electrode position revealed a statistically significant main effect for the factor REM episode under auditory stimulation (P = 0.05), whereas no significant main effect for REM episode was found under visual stimulation (P = 0.88). Applying a 2-factorial analysis of variance with the independent factors REM episode and electrode position in the case of auditory stimulation we could demonstrate a statistically significant main effect (P = 0.029) for the factor REM episode in the beta range (12.5–20 Hz). A subsequent analysis of contrasts revealed that the first REM episodes could be differentiated from each other. For auditory stimulation the beta resonance during the first REM episode appears enhanced compared to each of the later REM episodes. These findings point to a functional difference of the brain's transfer functions between the first and the 3 following REM episodes, indicating different information processing during consecutive paradoxical sleep.  相似文献   

19.
An attempt was made to evaluate critically the extent to which the background electrocorticogram, neuronal impulse activity, and evoked potentials reflect the state of cortical excitation and inhibition. It was shown that during electrocorticogram desynchronization, firing neurons predominated in the surface (mainly afferent) layers, while inhibited neurons were in the majority in the lower layers of the cortex. Consequently, desynchronization does not reflect diffuse excitation of the cortex and cannot be taken as an index of central excitation. Slow electrocortical waves cannot be used as indicators of an inhibitory state, even though they may be associated with processes leading to the development of inhibition. Under the effects of different stimuli, the number of neurons participating in impulse condition, and the number of neurons temporarily inhibiting impulse activity in the projection cortical area were stable (ratio 2:1). It was found that the correlation between impulse discharges of neuronal pairs increases during both central excitation and central inhibition. Nonetheless, differences between cortical excitation and inhibition were seen in the reorganization of neuronal columns. The use of evoked potentials to determine cortical excitation or inhibition is complicated by the fact that the amplitude of evoked-potential components reflects the divergent influences of many factors. It was shown that conditional excitation diminished the evoked potential to a light stimulus in the projection cortical area, but caused it to increase in the region of the motor analyzer. The elaboration of a conditional inhibition (extinction) is accompanied by the growth of an evoked potential to a stimulus in the primary cortical area, and by its repression in the region of the motor analyzer. In this case, a large delayed negative wave appears in the evoked potential.This report was presented at the All-Union Symposium on Electric Responses of the Cerebral Cortex to Afferent Stimuli, Kiev, October, 1969.Rostov-on-Don State University. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 2, pp. 140–154, March–April, 1970.  相似文献   

20.
The authors suggest a method for quantitative diagnosis of the functional state of the afferent pathways of the spinal cord by magnetic stimulation in the projection of the vertebrae CVI–CVII and LIII–LIV. The induced motor response (IMR) was recorded from the orbicular muscle of the eye. The velocity of propagation of excitation (VPE) along the afferent pathways between the vertebrae CVI–CVII and LIII–LIV was measured as the ratio of the distance between two stimulation points (along the coil center) to the difference between the latent periods of the recorded IMRs. In healthy adults, VPE was 77.93 ± 4.93 m/s, and in healthy children, 7- to 14-years old, it was 77.60 ± 4.12 m/s. In patients with disseminated sclerosis, this index was 40.15 ± 14.81 m/s. The asymmetry value (AV) was 5.31 ± 1.20 m/s. The VPE and AV in patients with disseminated sclerosis differed significantly from those in healthy subjects of same sex and age (p < 0.05).  相似文献   

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