Abstract: | In cats immobilized with tubocurarine, a paired-click method was used to determine the duration of the refractory period of 75 auditory cortical neurons responding to clicks with a latent period of up to 30 msec. Sixty-eight of the neurons exhibited no spontaneous activity, while in the other seven spontaneous activity was infrequent and irregular. It was found that a click makes responding neurons refractory to a second click for a long time. The duration of this refractory period is 3 to 700 msec; it is constant for each neuron, but varies from one neuron to another. A direct relationship was found between the number of neurons responding to the second click and the interval between the first and second clicks: the shorter the interval the fewer neurons respond to the second click. It is postulated that this dependence lies at the basis of the neurophysiological mechanism of perception and discrimination of short time intervals.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 2, No. 3, pp. 227–235, May–June, 1970. |