Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4343167 | Neuroscience | 2010 | 16 Pages |
Abstract
Activity-intensity functions for primary-like, chopper and onset-ex units showed monotonie increases with increases in stimulus intensity. Activity-intensity functions for onset-in units were non-monotonic. Latency-intensity functions for primary-like, chopper and onset-ex units exhibited monotonie decreases with increases in intensity. Latency-intensity functions for onset-in units were non-monotonic. In contrast to primary-like, chopper and onset-ex units, onset-in units do not retain the intensity and temporal information coded in the eighth nerve, as least for stimuli above 2 kilohertz. It is hypothesized that a depolarization block, caused by the massive eighth nerve input to octopus cells, is responsible for the inhibition observed from onset-in units.
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Authors
L.A. Ritz, W.E. Brownell,