Anatomical and physiological characteristics of individual neurones in the central antennal pathway of insects |
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Authors: | J. Boeckh K.D. Ernst H. Sass U. Waldow |
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Affiliation: | Institute für Zoology, University of Regensburg, D-8400 Regensburg, F.R.G. |
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Abstract: | Signals of tens up to hundreds of thousands of (mostly olfactory) receptor cells on an insect antenna are switched to a comparatively low number of neurones in the antennal lobe of the deutocerebrum in circumscribed units of neuropile, the glomeruli. Each glomerulus is connected via its output neurone to two separate neuropiles (calyces of mushroom body, and lateral lobe) of the protocerebrum. Local interneurones interconnect between the glomeruli. Certain modes of convergence between receptors and central neurones provide for a very high sensitivity of the latter to certain odours and their sensitivity for complex odour stimuli, and in many cases for a marked multimodality. Anatomical and physiological data are given especially for pheromone sensitive neurones and their projections. |
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Keywords: | Insect brain central olfactory pathway central coding of odour stimuli |
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