It has been demonstrated in awake rabbits that stimulation of the visual cortex by a solitary pulse of electrical current leads to the formation of a short-latency response in the superior colliculus. The formation of this response is suppressed when a light stimulus precedes it. At the same time, a conditioning solitary electrostimulation of the visual cortex induces a short inhibition of the formation of the response to the test light stimulus. This fact suggests that the influences of the visual cortex on the functioning of the superior colliculus may be biphasic in character. When the adrenergic apparatus of the reticular formation is blocked this inhibitory influence bears a more pronounced and prolonged character. The stimulation of the reticular formation, on the other hand, by means of anodic polarization leads to the diametrically opposite effect: the inhibitory character of the influence of the cortex is replaced by a facilitatory one. The inference is drawn that the character and the directionality of the influence of the visual cortex on the functioning of the superior colliculus is determined to a significant degree by the initial functional state of nonspecific brain systems.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF01186637 | DOI Listing |
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