Abstract

Evoked potentials were recorded in the system of raphe nuclei in experiments on unanesthetized, immobilized cats. Somatic stimulation proved to be the most effective of the different stimulations used (light flash, sound click, electrical stimulation of the skin of the limbs). Sound and light stimulation did not evoke pronounced responses, or the latter (to sound) were of a very low amplitude and irregular. In the second series of experiments on cats narcotized with nembutal (30–35 mg/kg) the spontaneous activity and activity evoked by somatic stimulation of single neurons of the caudal part of the raphe nuclei were studied. The overwhelming majority of neurons were characterized by spontaneous activity which changed (inhibited or facilitated) under the effects of somatic (especially repeated) stimulation; most of them reacted to stimulation of the skin of any limb. In the case of paired stimulation of the skin of limbs on different sides at large intervals (40–60 msec), inhibition of the test discharge occurred, whereas at small intervals summation (simple addition) of the impulses occurred. In their general characteristics the neurons of the raphe nuclei apparently differ little from the neurons of the reticular formation of the brain stem.

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