Abstract

Numerous experimental paradigms in behavioral electrophysiology and neuroethology require simultaneous recording of neural signals and behavior. A computer fitted with an analog to digital converter and a frame grabber was configured to perform both tasks. The analog to digital converter collected electrophysiological data while the frame grabber recorded video images. Since spike and image information were present in one computer, arbitrary combinations of electrophysiological and behavioral parameters could be used as the basis of an operant conditioning paradigm. The system was used to record subicular cell firing in rats performing a place search task. The computer monitored the output of the analog to digital converter for supra-threshold events. When one was detected, a block of samples (pre- and post-trigger) was stored in memory. The same computer also scanned every video frame to find the rat, and recorded a image of its behavior. The location of the rat was then quickly calculated. If it satisfied the task conditions, a brain reward pathway (medial forebrain bundle) was stimulated. The recording of neural and image data was monitored in real-time by writing spike waveforms and location data directly to video card RAM.

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