Abstract: | Temporal and amplitude characteristics of evoked potentials of the sensomotor cortex in waking cats were studied during variation in the intensity of electrodermal stimulation. The results obtained in experiments on intact animals and on the same animals for several months after division of the spinocervical tracts at the cervical level were compared. After blocking of the inflow of afferent impulses along these tracts of the spinal cord, statistically significant changes in evoked potentials were observed, mainly in response to medium and strong stimulation. These changes were more clear in the motor and second somatosensory areas of the cortex. A decrease in sensitivity to pain also was found. During recovery of the motor functions, cutaneous sensation remained impaired and the amplitude characteristics of the evoked somatosensory activity were not restored. The results suggest that thinner fibers predominate among the primary afferent fibers of the spinocervical tract, and their projections are more widely represented in the second somatosensory and motor areas of the cortex.Institute of Higher Nervous Activity and Neurophysiology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Moscow. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 4, No. 5, pp. 516–523, September–October, 1972. |