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Response of parietal association cortex neurons to acoustic stimulation before and after auditory cortex blockage in the cat
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- Author(s): Turkin, V. V.
- Source:
Neurophysiology; May 1986, Vol. 18 Issue: 3 p261-266, 6p
- Additional Information
- Abstract:
The effect of auditory cortex blockade on response patterns of parietal association cortex neurons responding to different frequency tones was investigated in the cat. Blockade was produced by two methods: bilateral isolation and application of a 6% Nembutal solution to the auditory cortex surface. Frequency threshold curves were plotted for all test neurons. The majority of test neurons (84%) displayed one or two characteristic frequencies before blockade, as against only 63% of all neurons responding following blockade. Changes also affect the range of frequencies at which the cells could respond. Virtually all test neurons responded to application of a broad spectrum of frequencies under normal conditions. After blockade of the auditory cortex 69% of neurons no longer responded to tones above 8–10 kHz. This would suggest that mainly information on high frequency tones is transmitted via the auditory cortex. The question of where acoustic information for parietal association cortex neurons mostly originates is also discussed; association thalamic nuclei are thought to be the main source.
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