CHANGES IN NEURONAL-ACTIVITY RELATED TO THE REPETITION AND RELATIVE FAMILIARITY OF VISUAL-STIMULI IN RHINAL AND ADJACENT CORTEX OF THE ANESTHETIZED RAT
Xo. Zhu et Mw. Brown, CHANGES IN NEURONAL-ACTIVITY RELATED TO THE REPETITION AND RELATIVE FAMILIARITY OF VISUAL-STIMULI IN RHINAL AND ADJACENT CORTEX OF THE ANESTHETIZED RAT, Brain research, 689(1), 1995, pp. 101-110
Employing the same techniques as have been used with conscious rats, t
his study describes neuronal responses signalling information concerni
ng the prior occurrence of visual stimuli in unconscious rats. Recordi
ngs of the activity of 387 neurones were made while anaesthetised rats
were shown objects. Changes in neuronal responses related to stimulus
repetition and the relative familiarity of visual stimuli were sought
. The areas sampled were lateral occipital cortex, area TE of temporal
cortex, perirhinal cortex and the hippocampal formation. The response
to the first presentations of unfamiliar objects was significantly di
fferent from that to their second presentations for 30 (35%) of 86 vis
ually responsive neurones; for 23 of the neurones the response was sma
ller when the stimulus was repeated, whereas for 7 it was larger. For
all of these neurones the response change was maintained across interv
ening trials on which other stimuli were shown. For 4 (25%) of 16 neur
ones so tested, the response decrement persisted across at least 10 in
tervening trials. The activity of 63 neurones was recorded while rats
were shown highly familiar as well as unfamiliar objects. The response
to unfamiliar objects was significantly different from that to highly
familiar objects for 3 (23%) of 13 visually responsive neurones. The
types of neuronal response and their incidence expressed as a proporti
on of the number of visually responsive neurones were similar to those
found in unanaesthetised rats (though the proportion of visually resp
onsive neurones encountered in the anaesthetised rat was lower). The r
esults indicate that information concerning the prior occurrence of st
imuli is processed even under anaesthesia.