Abstract

Single unit activities in the sulcal prefrontal cortex (S-PFC) were recorded during thermal stimulation of scrotal skin and the hypothalamus in urethane-anesthetized rats. (1) Of all the 146 S-PFC units tested, 126 (86%) units changed the firing rate in response to changes in scrotal skin temperature ( T sc), and 98 (67%) units to alterations in hypothalamic temperature ( T hyp). Sixty-five percent of the S-PFC units respondedd to both T sc and T hyp changes. (2) Response characteristics of T sc-responding S-PFC units were modified when the hypothalamus was warmed or cooled. (3) Microinjection of procaine into the dorsomedial nucleus of the thalamus reversibly blocked the response of S-PFC units to changes in T sc and/or T hyp. (4) The high degree of convergence of thermal signals from scrotal skin and the hypothalamus on the S-PFC suggests that the S-PFC neurons play a role in processing and integrating thermal signals arising from different parts of the body, probably in connection with the emotional and/or motivational aspect of neural sensation and thermoregulatory behavior.

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