Abstract

Boundaries of vestibular projections in the temporal cortex during stimulation of the vestibular nerve were studied in cats anesthetized with pentobarbital and chloralose or chloralose alone. The caudal boundary of the vestibular zone was shown to run along the anterior ectosylvian gyrus. A focus of evoked activity was found in the suprasylvian sulcus or 1–2 mm rostrally to it. All short-latency evoked potentials recorded during vestibular nerve stimulation in the temporal region caudally to the zone mentioned above were connected with the spread of current to auditory structures. To verify the extent of spread of the stimulating current, focal potentials were recorded in the vestibular and superior olivary groups of nuclei. Special experiments were carried out to study the topography of these potentials at the level of bulbar structures during stimulation of vestibular and auditory nerves. According to the results, there is no second vestibular area in the temporal cortex in cats. Vestibular afferentation is projected mainly into the contralateral hemisphere, and the response latency is 5.2±0.7 msec. The ipsilateral evoked potentials had a long latent period (8.4±1.3 msec), and their amplitude depended on the type of anesthesia; it was accordingly postulated that additional synaptic relays exist in this vestibulocortical pathway.

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