Somatosensory, multisensory, and task-related neurons in cortical area 7b (PF) of unanesthetized monkeys
W. K. Dong, E. H. Chudler, K. Sugiyama, V. J. Roberts and T. Hayashi Department of Anesthesiology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195. 1. The goal of this study was to quantitatively characterize the response properties of somatosensory and multisensory neurons in cortical ar...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of neurophysiology 1994-08, Vol.72 (2), p.542-564 |
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Zusammenfassung: | W. K. Dong, E. H. Chudler, K. Sugiyama, V. J. Roberts and T. Hayashi
Department of Anesthesiology, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle 98195.
1. The goal of this study was to quantitatively characterize the response
properties of somatosensory and multisensory neurons in cortical area 7b
(or PF) of monkeys that were behaviorally trained to perform an appetitive
tolerance-escape task. Particular emphasis was given to characterizing
nociceptive thermal responses and correlating such responses to thermal
pain tolerance as measured by escape frequency. 2. A total of 244 neurons
that responded to somatosensory stimulation alone or to both somatosensory
and visual stimulation (multisensory) were isolated and studied in the
trigeminal region of cortical area 7b. Thirty neurons responded only to
visual stimulation. Thermoreceptive neurons formed approximately 13% (31 of
244) of the neurons that had somatosensory response properties. Thermal
nociceptive neurons made up approximately 9% (21 of 244) of the neurons
that had somatosensory response properties or approximately 68% (21 of 31)
of the neurons that had thermoreceptive response properties. Thermal
nociceptive neurons responded either exclusively to noxious thermal stimuli
(high-threshold thermoreceptive, HTT) or differentially to nonnoxious and
noxious thermal stimuli (wide-range thermoreceptive, WRT). Multimodal HTT
neurons had nonnociceptive (low-threshold mechanoreceptive, LTM) and/or
nociceptive (nociceptive-specific, wide-dynamic-range) mechanical receptive
fields, whereas multimodal WRT neurons had only nonnociceptive (LTM)
mechanical receptive fields. Thermal nonnociceptive neurons (low-threshold
thermoreceptive, LTT) made up approximately 3% (8 of 244) of the neurons
that had somatosensory properties or approximately 26% (8 of 31) of the
neurons that were thermoreceptive. The background discharge of two
thermoreceptive neurons (6%, 2 of 31) was inhibited by innocuous thermal
stimulation. 3. Thermal nociceptive neurons (HTT and WRT) were functionally
differentiated by statistical analyses into subpopulations that did encode
(HTT-EN, WRT-EN) and did not encode (HTT-NE, WRT-NE) the magnitude of
noxious thermal stimulus intensities. The mean slopes and median regression
coefficients for the stimulus-response (S-R) functions of HTT-EN and WRT-EN
neurons, respectively, were significantly greater than those for the S-R
functions of HTT-NE and WRT-NE neurons. In contrast to HTT-NE and WRT-NE |
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ISSN: | 0022-3077 1522-1598 |
DOI: | 10.1152/jn.1994.72.2.542 |