Abstract: | Unit responses of the inferior colliculi of albino rats to frequency-modulated stimuli were investigated. The number of spikes, firing pattern, and duration of the discharge were determined. Parameters of unit responses obtained with different directions of frequency modulation were compared with the results of testing the effect of constant-frequency tones on the neurons. The distinguishing features of the unit responses to stimuli with different directions of frequency modulation were compared with the characteristics of the frequency-threshold curve and the lateral inhibitory zones, taken as indices of the unit responses to constant-frequency tones. With a change in stimulus frequency upward or downward from the initial level the unit responses to both directions could be similar as regards the number of spikes per discharge and the firing pattern or could differ sharply depending on the direction or, finally, they could arise only if the stimulus frequency changed in one direction. In some cases selectivity for the direction of the change in stimulus frequency was due to the width and position of the lateral inhibitory zones. However, for one-third of the neurons tested analysis of the spatial characteristics of the excitatory and inhibitory zones alone was insufficient to explain the high selectivity in the formation of a response to a stimulus with frequency modulation in one direction only.I. M. Sechenov Institute of Evolutionary Physiology and Biochemistry, Academy of Sciences of the USSR, Leningrad. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol.6, No.3, pp.237–245, May–June, 1974. |