Cortical Mechanisms that Augment or Reduce Evoked Potentials in Cats
- 7 October 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Science
- Vol. 198 (4312) , 73-75
- https://doi.org/10.1126/science.897686
Abstract
The augmenting or reducing of flash-evoked potentials in paralyzed cats was significantly correlated with their previously videotaped behaviors. Augmenting reducing was due to alterations in cortical rather than subcortical responsiveness, and was duplicated by increasing cortical arousal by means of reticular stimulation while the animal was exposed to visual stimuli of constant intensity. Brainstem activation of cortical inhibition may underlie the behavioral results as well as the results obtained with the evoked potentials.This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Sensation Seeking and Cortical Augmenting‐ReducingPsychophysiology, 1974
- Evoked Potential Tests of Augmenting‐ReducingPsychophysiology, 1974
- The Effects of Attention, Stimulus Intensity, and Individual Differences on the Average Evoked ResponsePsychophysiology, 1973
- Modulation of visual cortex inhibition during reticular evoked arousalPhysiology & Behavior, 1972
- Influence of antidromic callosal volleys on single units in visual cortexExperimental Neurology, 1971
- A Paradigm for the Study of Altered States of ConsciousnessThe British Journal of Psychiatry, 1968
- A rapid procedure for locating deep electrode placements☆Physiology & Behavior, 1968
- Responsiveness in the visual system during various phases of sleep and wakingExperimental Neurology, 1965
- Midbrain Reticular Influences upon Single Neurons in Lateral Geniculate NucleusScience, 1963
- Excitation and Inhibition of Neuronal Firing in Visual Cortex by Reticular StimulationScience, 1961