Abstract
Responses of 579 neurons in a slab of cerebral cortex (3 weeks after its isolation) to intracortical stimulation, with a distance of 0.5, 1.0, and 2.0 mm between recording and stimulating electrodes, were tested intercellularly and histological changes in a similar slab were studied in experiments on cats. Primary IPSPs were shown to develop in the chronically isolated slab in a much larger number of neurons than in the acutely isolated slab. Latent periods of IPSPs in all series of experiments did not exceed 10 msec, and most IPSPs were mono- and disynaptic. The amplitude and duration of the IPSPs were similar to those observed in the acutely isolated slab and intact auditory cortex in cats. It is concluded that local intracortical neuronal chains along which impulses evoking an inhibitory effect in the terminal neuron of the chain are transmitted are of relatively short length. Such chains may participate in local processing of incoming information. Analysis of the distribution of neurons responding by primary IPSPs by duration of their latent periods and depth in the slab in each series of experiments revealed a spatial and temporal mosaic of inhibitory responses in the chronically isolated slab of auditory cortex and showed that this mosaic is due to intracortical mechanisms.
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