This article describes the methodological approach of systemic psychophysiology. In the framework of this approach a wide range of experimental data is analyzed: results of neuronal recordings in vitro and in awake normal and pathological animals learning to perform and performing both complex instrumental and simple behavioral acts. Another block of analyzed data is based on experiments with human subjects who learn and perform the tasks of categorization of words and operator tasks, participate in group game activity, and answer the questionnaires of psychodiagnostic methods.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFActa Physiol Scand
September 1993
Acute effect of ethanol on hippocampal neurons was studied during food acquisition behaviour in seven rabbits. The rabbits were taught to acquire food from a feeder by pressing a pedal on the same side of the cage. The behaviourally specialized units (L units related to newly learned behaviour and M units related to behaviour formed before learning, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSingle-unit activity was studied in the limbic cortex of eight freely moving rabbits in order to find out what kind of changes in the organization of unit activity correlate with behavioural disturbances following an acute administration of ethanol (1 g kg-1). The rabbits were taught to acquire food by pressing pedals in the experimental cage. Unit activity was recorded during this behaviour in a control experiment and the alcohol experiment took place the next day.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNeurosci Behav Physiol
April 1991
The activity of motor cortex neurons in instrumental food-acquisition behavior is compared in two control rabbits and in three rabbits after bilateral ablation of the visual cortex. Although the same types of neuron specialization were found in the experimental and control animals, their numerical ratio differed markedly in two out of the three experimental rabbits in comparison with the controls: the number of neurons activated in the act of seizing food was halved, while the number of neurons activated in connection with acts of instrumental behavior doubled. The similarity of the processes underlying behavior learning and recovery is discussed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn order to find out whether damage of the visual cortex (area 17) of the brain results in a functional reorganization of the motor cortex, experiments were carried out with freely moving rabbits performing a food acquisition task in an experimental cage. Two rabbits served as controls, while in three rabbits the visual cortex was bilaterally damaged. Analysis of the activity of 575 neurons in the control and operated rabbits after the recovery of the original instrumental food acquisition behaviour revealed a marked difference in the behavioural specialization of the neurons in the motor cortex of two operated rabbits compared with the control animals.
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