Abstract

Responses of neurons of the periaqueductal gray matter (PAG) were studied in chronic experiments on cats during formation and extinction of a defensive conditioned reflex to sound and its differential inhibition. In response to conditioned stimulation these neurons developed phasic-tonic spike responses up to 3 sec in duration. During combination of stimuli these responses were formed long before the conditioned reflex and disappeared long after the latter was extinguished. In the case of an established conditioned reflex, the onset of spike responses occurred 100–200 msec before the appearance of motor responses. An increase in spike activity of tonic character in neurons of PAG preceded voluntary movements by 100–500 msec. The responses of these neurons to presentation of a differential stimulus consisted of groups of spikes 150–200 msec in duration. They were formed with difficulty, and their manifestation was made even more difficult by an interruption during the experiment and by preceding positive stimuli. On the basis of the results a conditioned reflex can be regarded as the result of a multilevel hierarchic process of readjustment of unit activity, which begins in the nonspecific structures of the midbrain.

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