Abstract: | Responses of 200 primary auditory cortical neurons to electrical stimulation of nerve fibers in different receptor zones of the cochlea were studied in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital. Under the influence of paired stimulation, after the response to the conditioning stimulus a state of prolonged (from 4 to 200 msec) refractiveness to the second stimulus developed in all the neurons tested. This long-lasting inhibition of unit activity was due to inhibition developing in the thalamus and the auditory cortex itself. The intensity and duration of excitation and inhibition in the cortical projection focus were maximal when the center of the receptive field was stimulated and decreased when the stimulus shifted from the center to the periphery. The region of the receptor surface of the cochlea to stimulation of which the auditory cortical neurons respond by an action potential is much narrower than the region whose electrical stimulation depresses the discharge of these neurons.A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 4, pp. 418–425, July–August, 1982. |