Abstract

1. Cross-correlation techniques have been used to study the responses of muscle spindle afferents from the soleus muscle of the cat to twitch contractions of single motor units. 2. Cross-correlograms (post-stimulus time histograms) were used to give the frequency of occurrence of a receptor spike at various times following the initiation of a motor unit contraction together with a display of the average twitch tension wave form. 3. The cross-correlograms revealed that the contraction of a single motor unit can be an effective stimulus to a spindle receptor and may induce afferent firing pattern alterations similar to those observed with whole muscle contraction. 4. The cross-correlograms also revealed quantitative differences in the response of a receptor to contraction of different motor units and to contraction of the same motor unit at different lengths. These differences reflect subtle changes in receptor deformation developed by the twitch of a motor unit under different conditions and by the twitches of different motor units. The results are consistent with anatomical data on the number and distribution of motor units and receptor organs in cat soleus. 5. These findings emphasize that rather than simply acting as generalized force or length sensors for the muscle as a whole, each receptor's spike train carries information about the state of a particular set of motor units.

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