Unit activity in posterior association cortex of cat

Abstract
1. "Association" neurons in the posterior middle suprasylvian gyrus of cat were found to be predominantly polysensory, with 82% of the units in the chloralose-anesthetized preparation responding to auditory, visual, and somatic stimuli. There was no evidence of response differentiation associated with cortical depth distribution. Most units responded with a short-latency response (median 35-60 ms) to all stimulus modalities, with the response to visual stimulation occurring at the shortest latency. Among polysensory cells, almost half responded with equal probability to auditory, visual, and somatic stimulation. The visual stimulus was the most potent for those cells responding with a higher probability to a single modality. Varying degrees of response complexity were noted in some cells in terms of changes in responsivity over time, discharge to stimulus offset, and inhibition of spontaneous activity. The unitary discharge was seen to occur on the negative peak and slope of the locally recorded evoked potential. When only the larger amplitude spikes were analyzed, most of the unitary activity occurred on the negative peak of the evoked potential. Almost half of trimodally responsive cells displayed similar phase relationships between unitary activity and evoked potentials for all three modalities. The absolute refractory period for most cells was from 200 to 300 ms, with relative refractory periods extending up to 30 s...

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