Abstract

Spike responses of the sensorimotor cortex neurons were studied in chronic experiments on cats trained to perform an operant reflex, a placing movement triggered by application of the distant stimuli. The responses recorded under conditions of differentiation of sound tones of various frequencies and of a heteromodal complex (light + tone) from its components were compared. The responses recorded from 125 neurons in 3 animals were analyzed. No neurons selectively responding either to monomodal or to heteromodal signals were found. Forty-five cells responded to positive signals by excitation or inhibition, irrespective of the signal modality. The shortest latencies of these responses were 30 and 40 msec, respectively. When inhibitory stimuli were applied, these neurons either generated much weaker responses, or did not respond at all. A correlation was found between the level of response depression and the level of differentiation of the signals by an animal. These findings allow us to hypothesize that the sensorimotor cortex does participate in differentiation of sensory signals, providing preparation for switching on the motor response after a positive stimulus or suppression of such a response after a negative one.

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