Publications by authors named "A Herve-Minvielle"

Neuronal activity was established in the auditory pathways in relation to behavioural response and cognitive information processing during a sensory-motor acoustic learning. Rats were trained in three consecutive phases. The first phase was an association between an auditory stimulus and a food reward; the second phase a simple discrimination between two sounds of different frequency components, and the third phase a more complex discrimination involving both spectral and spatial sound dimensions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Neuronal activity in the cochlear nucleus was mapped in relation to acoustic stimuli that signalled a sensory-motor response, using Fos-like immunoreactivity. Rats were trained to associate an acoustic stimulus with a reward and then to discriminate between two sounds ('learning' rats; n = 18). The same stimuli carrying no behavioural significance were pseudo-randomly presented to 'control' rats (n = 4) to differentiate stimulus related- from learning related-activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Multiunit or single unit activity recorded simultaneously from frontal cortex (FC) and locus coeruleus (LC) under ketamine anesthesia revealed that both regions show slow oscillatory activity, together or separately. If, however, both regions are engaged in this oscillatory activity, there is a systematic relationship between their phases with peak LC firing always following FC firing by 200-400 ms. This was confirmed by cross-correlational analyses, which indicated that the two structures temporarily form a resonant system.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The auditory response of locus coeruleus (LC) neurones evoked by novel tones was investigated in anaesthetized and awake rats. Recording the single unit activity of LC neurones, responses to auditory stimuli are found under anaesthesia as well as in the awake animal. There are three types of LC responses to tone: first and by far the most frequent, a burst of several spikes at onset of the tone; second, a burst at tone offset and lastly, a total inhibition to the tone.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The functional influence of the frontal cortex (FC) on the noradrenergic nucleus locus coeruleus (LC) was studied in the rat under ketamine anesthesia. The FC was inactivated by local infusion of lidocaine or ice-cold Ringer's solution while recording neuronal activity simultaneously in FC and LC. Lidocaine produced a transient increase in activity in FC, accompanied by a decrease in LC unit and multiunit activity.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF