Abstract

Unit activity in cortical areas 24 and 32 was studied during conditioned placing reflex formation in cats. Neuronal responses in the limbic cortex of trained animals correlated with acoustic stimulation, the motor response, and also with the presentation of food reinforcement. In untrained animals 16% of neurons responded to acoustic stimulation. After training the number of neurons responding to sound in area 32 increased to 51.3%. Of the total number of neurons, 34.6% responded by initial excitation and 26.7% by inhibition of spike activity. The latent period of these responses was about 50 msec and their duration up to 200 msec. Similar but weaker responses were observed in area 24. Short-latency activation responses to conditioned and differential stimulation were similar in character. It is suggested that after training processes taking place in the limbic cortex may contribute to better perception of both conditioned and differential acoustic stimuli, irrespective of their functional significance.

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