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Responses of somatic cortical neurons during the conditioned placing reflex in cats

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Abstract

Unit activity was studied in areas 3 and 4 during the conditioned placing reflex in cats. Responses of somatic cortical neurons in this case were shown to develop comparatively late — 80–100 or, more often, 200–450 msec after the conditioned stimulus. In the motor cortex responses preceded movement by 50–550 msec, whereas in the somatosensory cortex they usually began simultaneously with or after the beginning of the movement. Judging from responses of somatic cortical neurons, the placing reflex is realized by the same neuronal mechanism as the corresponding voluntary movement. The differential stimulus and positive conditioned stimulus, after extinction of the conditioned placing reflex, evoked short-latency spike responses lasting 250–350 msec in the same neurons as took part in the reflex itself. In these types of internal inhibition, responses of the neurons were thus initially excitatory in character. Participation of the neurons in the conditioned placing reflex and its extinction, disinhibition, and differentiation, is the result of a change in the time course of excitatory processes and is evidently connected with differential changes in the efficiency of the various synaptic inputs of the neuron.

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A. A. Bogomolets Institute of Physiology, Academy of Sciences of the Ukrainian SSR, Kiev. Translated from Neirofiziologiya, Vol. 14, No. 4, pp. 392–401, July–August, 1982.

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Storozhuk, V.M., Tal'nov, A.N. Responses of somatic cortical neurons during the conditioned placing reflex in cats. Neurophysiology 14, 294–302 (1982). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01058739

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01058739

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