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Neuronal responses in the limbic cortex of awake cats during defensive conditioning
Authors:L. É. Zinyuk
Abstract:Spike activity was investigated in limbic cortex neurons during defensive conditioning to acoustic stimulation in chronic experiments on cats. A relationship was found between the numbers of neurons responding, their contribution to formation of a temporal connection, and the duration of the acoustic stimulus. Phasic responses of 50–500 msec duration with latencies of 15–50 msec were observed for the most part. Intensive spike response with a minimum latency of 15 msec and a duration of between 200 msec and 2.5 sec evolved in most cells (95.1% in field 24 and 83% in field 32) in response to electrical stimulation. Response to acoustic stimulation rose during defensive conditioning in 33.3% cells and declined and finally disappeared in 13.3%, but response at the site where reinforcement was abolished was reproduced in all these cells. It was thus found that the numbers of limbic cortex neurons responding to sound not only fails to increase but actually decreases after training. The limbic cortex is thought to play its most active part in conditioning response to a recognized signal during the period preceding the awaited painful reinforcement.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 18, No. 5, pp. 660–669, September–October, 1986.
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