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  • 1990-1994  (591)
  • 1965-1969
  • 1990  (591)
  • Engineering General  (524)
  • Cat
  • Physics
  • Psychopharmacology
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0568
    Keywords: Ia interneurones ; Dendrites ; Horseradish peroxidase ; Intracellular injection ; Light microscopy ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Interneurones which mediate disynaptic inhibition from la muscle spindle afferents of the quadriceps nerve to lumbar alpha-motoneurones were stained with intracellular injection of horseradish peroxidase. Seven best stained and most satisfactorily preserved cells were selected for analysis, and the light microscopic morphology of their cell bodies and dendrites were quantitatively investigated in parasagittal sections. The perikarya were located dorsal or dorso-medial to the motoneurones; they had mean diameters of 51 × 27 μm and a mean volume of 35820 μm3. The cells had 3 to 7 dendrites, which were arranged asymmetrically around the parent somata. The dendrites extended mainly in the dorso-ventral direction, in which the mean tip to tip distance for each cell was 1742 μm. The dendrites had few spines and they branched almost only in bifurcations. On the average, each process divided 3.5 times and in each cell they gave rise to 14.9 branching points as well as a total combined length of more than 7000 μm. Primary dendrites had a mean length of 193 μm which was generally shorter than the lengths of the branches of higher order. A more detailed analysis of two cells revealed the mean width of primary dendrites to be 5.6 μm while that of the 5th order processes was 1.5 μm. The mean tapering of individual dendritic branches per unit length was 17%, being somewhat more pronounced for the distally located segments, while at branching points the sum of daughter processes approximately equalled the diameter of the parent process. The surface area and volume of the dendrites constituted 90% and 83% of the total surface area and 46% and 37% of the total volume of the two cells, respectively, excluding the axons. The Ia interneurones differed considerably among themselves with respect to the quantitively investigated parameters. They resembled the inhibitory Renshaw cells of the cat with regard to the number of dendrites, the poverty of spines, and the relationships between cell body diameter and width of primary dendrites.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Ischemia ; Cat ; Selective vulnerability ; Immunohistochemistry ; Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP)
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The dorsal hippocampus of cat was investigated by light microscopy and immunohistochemistry following 1 h global cerebral ischemia and various recirculation times from 1 day to 1 year. Complete ischemia was produced by combining hypotension with intrathoracic occlusion of major arteries. Postischemic resuscitation was carried out using an intensive care regimen with continuous neurophysiological monitoring. Brains of controls (n=4) and postischemic animals (n=12) were fixed in formaldehyde and prepared for histology and immunohistochemistry of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). In all post-ischemic animals the hilus and the regio superior of dorsal hippocampus which encompasses the CA1 subfield were severely damaged. Neurons in these regions exhibited the typical sequela of neuronal death. GFAP staining revealed vivid astroglial proliferation in stratum lacunosum-moleculare and stratum oriens. Changes in the regio inferior of dorsal hippocampus, i.e., CA3 subfield, and in dentate gyrus granular layer, were variable. Although most animals exhibited moderate to severe neuronal and glial alterations, groups of surviving cells were observed in the stratum oriens and in the granular layer of dentate gyrus. In one animal the majority of CA3 pyramidal cells and granule cells was preserved. These findings demonstrate that after 1 h of complete cerebral ischemia dorsal hippocampus exhibits two different types of injury: a consistent pattern of selective vulnerability in the hilus and the regio superior, and a variable pattern of non-selective injury in the regio inferior and dentate gyrus. The two patterns can be best explained by intrinsic (pathoclitic) and extrinsic (hemodynamic/edema) factors, respectively and are likely to represent basically different mechanisms of ischemic injury.
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Acta neuropathologica 81 (1990), S. 217-218 
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Immunohistochemistry ; Polyglucosan bodies ; Dog ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary With the use of monoclonal antibodies, raised against the human polyglucosan, positive staining of polyglucosan bodies (PGB) was detected in the brain, spinal cord and cecum of aged dogs. PGB in feline brain were also positively stained with these antibodies. These findings indicate that animal PGB share common antigenicity with human PGB.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: [K+]0 Spinal cord ; Posterior articular nerve ; Knee joint ; Inflammation ; Pain ; Arthritis ; Nociception ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In 20 cats anaesthetized with alpha-chloralose and spinalized at the thoracolumbar junction we investigated the role of stimulation induced accumulation of extracellular potassium in the spinal cord in the processing of nociceptive discharges from the knee joint. For that we electrically stimulated the posterior articular nerve of the knee. We further performed innocuous and noxious stimulation of the knee and of other parts of the leg and studied the effect of an acute inflammation of the knee on [K+]0 in the spinal cord. Innocuous stimulation of the skin (brushing or touching) and innocuous movements in the knee joint all induced rises in [K+]0 which were maximal at recording depths of 1500 to 2200 μm below the surface of the cord dorsum. Peak increases were 0.4 mM for touching the leg and 1.7 mM during rhythmic flexion/ extension of the knee joint. Noxious stimulation of the skin, the paw, the tendon and noxious movements of the knee joint also produced rises in [K+]0, which were somewhat larger for the individual types of stimuli than those produced by innocuous intensities. Electrical stimulation of the posterior articular nerve induced rises in [K+]0 by up to 0.6 mM. Stimulus intensities sufficient to activate unmyelinated group IV fibers were only slightly effective in raising [K+]0 above the levels reached during stimulation of myelinated group II and III fibers. During development of an acute inflammation of the knee joint (induced by kaolin and carrageenan), increases in [K+]0 and associated field potentials became larger by about 25%. We assume that this reflects an increase in neuronal responses. In conclusion, changes in [K+]0 in the spinal cord are some-what larger during noxious stimulation than during innocuous stimulation. The absolute level reached depended more on the site and type of stimulation than on the actual stimulus intensity itself. Hence a critical role of spinal K+ accumulation for nociception is unlikely.
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 459-466 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Retinotectal ; Topography ; Superior colliculus ; W-cell ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Most of the retinal input to the cat's superior colliculus (SC) arises from W-cells of the contralateral eye and terminates just below the tectal surface. The goal of this study was to determine whether the strength of this input is uniform over the collicular map or, instead, exhibits topographic variations as has been reported for the retinotectal Y-cell projection (McIlwain and Lufkin 1976). Monosynaptic inputs from the principal W-cell projection mediate the late negative potential (LNP), a collicular field potential that can be evoked by shocks to the optic pathway. We assumed that the amplitude of the potential provided a measure of the strength of the W-cell input to the upper superficial gray layer. Using a fixed stimulus, we measured the maximal amplitude of the LNP at 90 topographically identified tectal sites in 5 cats. The amplitude of the LNP varied as much as 5-fold over the SC and was systematically related to the azimuthal position of the recording site. LNP amplitudes were consistently smallest in the representation of the area centralis and vertical meridian and largest in the representations of the contralateral hemifield periphery and the ipsilateral hemifield. There was little systematic variation in LNP amplitude as a function of elevation in the map. The observed variations did not result from non-uniform activation of retinal afferents or drift in properties of the recording electrodes, stimuli, or preparation. The results suggest that the principal W-cell input to the SC is weaker in the representation of the area centralis than elsewhere in the map. These topographic variations are similar to those reported for the retinotectal Y-cell projection (McIlwain and Lufkin 1976) and are consistent with anatomical evidence for thinning of retinal input in the area-centralis representation (Graybiel 1975; Harting and Guillery 1976; Mize 1983). An important implication of these results is that the scaling of the collicular retinotopic map may not be proportional to the spatial density of tectally projecting W-cells.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Spinal cord ; Spinal reflexes ; Monosynaptic reflex ; Motor control ; Man ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In parallel experiments on humans and in the cat it was investigated how the sensitivity of monosynaptic test reflexes to facilitation and inhibition varies as a function of the size of the control test reflex itself. In man the monosynaptic reflex (the Hoffmann reflex) was evoked in either the soleus muscle (by stimulation of the tibial nerve) or the quadriceps muscle (by stimulation of the femoral nerve). In the decerebrate cat monosynaptic reflexes were recorded from the nerves to soleus and medial gastrocnemius muscles; they were evoked by stimulation of the proximal ends of the sectioned L7 and S1 dorsal roots. Various excitatory and inhibitory spinal reflex pathways were used for conditioning the test reflexes (e.g. monosynaptic Ia excitation, disynaptic reciprocal inhibition, cutaneous inhibition, recurrent inhibition, presynaptic inhibition of the Ia fibres mediating the test reflex). It was shown that the additional number of motoneurones recruited in a monosynaptic test reflex by a constant excitatory conditioning stimulus was very much dependent on the size of the test reflex itself. This dependency had the same characteristic pattern whatever the conditioning stimulus. With increasing size of the test reflex the number of additionally recruited motoneurones first increased, then reached a peak (or plateau) and finally decreased. A similar relation was also seen with inhibitory conditioning stimuli. The basic physiological factors responsible for these findings are discussed. Finally, the implications for the interpretation of experiments in man with the H-reflex technique are considered.
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  • 7
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 377-383 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Cerebellum ; Auditory ; Hearing ; Granule cells ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We mapped the topographic distribution of auditory responses in the posterior cerebellar vermis of the cat under barbiturate anesthesia. Auditory neurons in the granule cell layer of lobules VI and VII appeared to be arranged in columns perpendicular to the surface of the cerebellar cell layers. Mapping the surface of the cerebellum, auditory responses were found as separated patches of the order of a square millimeter. Neurons on these patches responded to auditory stimuli but neurons between patches did not respond to sound. In decerebrated cats, the entire granule cell layer within the cerebellar auditory area responded to acoustic stimulation without a patchy pattern. Responses to tonal stimuli from single neurons in the granule cell layer were studied before and after the induction of barbiturate anesthesia. Some neurons showed no change in their responses to sound before and under barbiturate. But other neurons showed dramatically attenuated responses or essentially stopped responding as a result of barbiturate anesthesia. These results suggest that there may be two types of granule cells distinguishable in their auditory responses and therefore possibly in function.
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  • 8
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Area 19 ; Visual noise ; Detection performance ; Signal-to-noise thresholds ; S/N profiles ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The contribution of area 19 to pattern discrimination in the cat was studied by single cell recordings in this area and by behavioural experiments before and after bilateral lesions. In order to make quantitative comparisons between behavioural performance and that of cell systems, we introduced a new parameter that characterizes visual neurons by their signal-to-noise (S/N) thresholds. A structured visual background made up of Gaussian visual broadband noise which could be moved was superimposed on the signal (moving bars or outline patterns) and the S/N characteristics of the response were determined by varying the signal intensity. The detection performance of cats after bilateral lesion of area 19 showed no deficits. Only for slowly (11 deg/s) or quickly (110 deg/s) moving patterns, or when the background was moved relative to stationary patterns, did we find slight, but significant deficits in the low S/N range. However, when the S/N ratios were higher than 5, all cats achieved their full preoperative performances and no deficits remained. The S/N thresholds of neurons in area 19 were much higher than those found for neurons in areas 17 and 18. The lowest thresholds were found with a stationary background. Introduction of relative velocity between background and bar resulted in intermediate thresholds and the highest thresholds were observed for stimulus configurations lacking relative velocity. These effects correspond to the performance of the intact animal, in which introduction of relative motion increases the performance. The S/N thresholds did not correlate with levels of spike rate recorded at high S/N ratios, direction selectivity or speed preference, indicating that S/N threshold measurements provide a significant additional description of visual neurons. A limited number of area 19 cells recorded in area 17/18 lesioned animals showed very similar thresholds suggesting that this property may be independent of the intactness of areas 17 and 18. The residual performance by 17/18 lesioned cats in detecting small patterns corresponds well to the characteristics of the single cells of area 19. This suggests that area 19 might be able to make a considerable contribution to this task when areas 17/18 are eliminated, though by itself it seems not to be able to sustain the level of performance mediated by them. The contribution of area 19 is restricted to performances at high S/N ratios only. In contrast to what was found for areas 17 and 18, area 19 makes no essential contribution to lowering the S/N ratio at which the system is able to detect the presence of a pattern in a background of irrelevant detail.
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  • 9
    Electronic Resource
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 639-648 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Respiratory neurons ; Antidromic mapping ; Spike-triggered averaging ; Respiratory control ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Axonal projections and synaptic connectivity of expiratory Bötzinger neurons with an augmenting firing pattern (Bot-Aug neurons) to neurons in the ipsilateral ventral respiratory group (VRG) were studied in anaesthetized cats. Antidromic mapping revealed extensive axonal arborizations of Bot-Aug neurons (24 of 45) to the rostral or caudal VRG, with some having arbors in both regions. Of 234 pairs of neurons studied with intracellular recording and spike-triggered averaging, monosynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) were evoked in 49/221 VRG neurons by 38/98 Bot-Aug neurons. The highest incidence of monosynaptic inhibition was found in inspiratory bulbospinal neurons (10 of 23 tested). Evidence was also found for monosynaptic inhibition, by a separate group of Bot-Aug neurons, of expiratory bulbospinal neurons (12/58), while excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) were identified in another two of these neurons. In addition, monosynaptic IPSPs were recorded from 13 of 53 identified laryngeal motoneurons, and from 14 of 100 respiratory propriobulbar neurons. Presumptive disynaptic IPSPs were recorded from 11 of the 221 VRG neurons. We conclude that Bot-Aug neurons exert widespread inhibition on all major neuron categories in the ipsilateral VRG, and should be regarded as an important element in shaping the spatiotemporal output pattern of both respiratory motoneurons and premotor neurons.
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  • 10
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 82 (1990), S. 33-39 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus ; Non-length tuned cells ; Acetylcholine ; Relay cells ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Length tuning was first described for the “hypercomplex cell category” in the visual cortex. However it has subsequently become apparent that cells in the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (dLGN) also exhibit a high degree of length tuning and that for the majority of the population this matches or exceeds that associated with cortical hypercomplex cells (Cleland et al. 1983; Jones and Sillito 1987). In this paper we describe a distinct subpopulation of dLGN Y cells that lack length tuning. These cells were also characterised by poor centre-surround antagonism, and tended to be located close to laminar borders. They appeared to constitute 25% of the Y cell population. Following recent evidence showing relay cells to be powerfully excited by acetylcholine, and inhibitory interneurones to be inhibited, we have examined the responses of these non-length tuned cells to iontophoretic application of acetylcholine. Their brisk excitatory responses suggest that these cells are in fact relay cells. Their presence raises the possibility of a discrete non-length tuned component to the geniculate input to the cortex, and has potentially important implications for the way in which synaptic processes contributing to the length tuning profiles of visual cortical cells are modelled.
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  • 11
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 82 (1990), S. 67-76 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Retina ; Visual cortex ; Retrograde transneuronal transport ; Wheat-germ agglutinin ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Injections of peroxidase-conjugated wheatgerm agglutinin (WGA-HRP) were made into areas 17 or 18 of cats. After survivals of 3–7 days, foci of HRP-labeled ganglion cells were found at the appropriate topographic locations in the retinas. The labeling was interpreted as resulting from retrograde transneuronal transport through the lateral geniculate nucleus. This phenomenon offers a new and simple technique for the study of retinotopic maps in visual cortex.
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  • 12
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: α-motoneurones ; Dendrites ; Tenotomy ; Overload ; Development ; Plasticity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The anatomy of intracellularly HRP-labeled soleus α-motoneurone dendrites was studied both in normal adult cats (“normal soleus”, NS) and in adult cats which at a postnatal age of 5–7 days had been subjected to chronic tenotomy of either the soleus muscle (“tenotomized soleus”, TS), or all the soleus synergists contributing to the achilles tendon (“overloaded soleus”, OS). A set of “structural rules” seemed to govern the architecture of normal soleus α-motoneurone dendrites. Thus, the dendrites branched dichotomously and the number of daughter branches originating from a preterminal branch was proportional to the diameter of that parent branch. Branch diameter decreased across branching points according to the “3/2 power rule” of Rall (1959). Branching occurred down to a preterminal branch diameter of about 0.8 μm. Through all branch orders there existed a quite precise relation between the diameter of a preterminal branch and the membrane area of its distal dendritic arborization. The average dendritic path distance from soma to termination was not closely related to the diameter of the stem dendrite, since thick stem dendrites rather generated more profusely branched arborizations than thin stem dendrites. As a corollary of these characteristics close relations existed between the dendritic stem diameter on one hand, and the total number of branches, combined dendritic length, total dendritic membrane area and total volume, on the other. In the OS material, the dendrites were not different from those of normal soleus motoneurone dendrites. In the TS material, the dendrites were less branched and had greater dendritic path lengths, although the relations between various size-parameters within the dendrites were not significantly altered compared with normal dendrites. It was concluded that the change in branching pattern was due to a net elimination of dendritic branches following the muscle tenotomy.
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  • 13
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Glutamate ; Visual cortex ; HPLC ; Pushpull cannula ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary To test the possibility that glutamate (Glu) and aspartate (Asp) are transmitters at geniculo-cortical synapses in the visual cortex of the cat, we studied the release of amino acids from the striate cortex consequent upon visual and electrical stimulation of the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and of the optic tract, using push-pull cannulae. We perfused a discrete region that included layer IV of the cortex with an artificial cerebrospinal fluid (aCSF) and analysed the amino acid content of these perfusates by high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC). Significant increases only of Glu and Asp were obtained among all 17 amino acids measured, except for gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA), during electrical stimulation of the afferent pathways. Visual stimulation by stroboscopic diffuse flashes of light increased the level of Glu released, but did not change that of Asp significantly. The level of GABA released did not change during diffuse flash stimulation, suggesting that the increase in Glu was not derived from cortical neurons. The increases in release of Glu/Asp were not seen when the perfusion medium was replaced with a Ca2+-free, high-Mg2+-containing solution. The basal (resting) release of Glu/Asp in the absence of stimulation also was decreased during perfusion with Ca2+-free/high-Mg2+ solutions. Intraocular injections of a sodium channel blocker, tetrodotoxin (TTX), resulted in a remarkable decrease in the basal release of Glu. These results suggest that Glu is released as an excitatory synaptic transmitter at least from terminals of geniculo-cortical afferents and Asp from axons of a certain type of visual cortical neuron.
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  • 14
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    Springer
    Experimental brain research 82 (1990), S. 48-66 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Texture segregation ; Textons ; Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Figure ground discrimination ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The spontaneous segregation of texture areas is an impressive perceptual phenomenon, the neural basis of which is not yet understood. In the texton concept (Julesz and Bergen 1983; Julesz 1984, 1986) it is assumed that the visual system analyzes a stimulus for certain features (‘textons’) the spatial distribution of which is pre-attentively registered and may provide the percept of dissected texture areas. Supposed textons are blobs of a given size, oriented lines, line intersections and line terminators, suggesting that texture analysis is exclusively mediated by form-specific filters at higher, e.g. cortical, processing levels. This paper investigates the contribution of cells in the cat lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) to segregation of typical texton differences. The results indicate that LGN cells, though not resembling the supposed texton filters, often distinguished textured arrangements of such features on the basis of a variety of other visual cues, such as global or local variations in mean luminance or differences in spatial frequency composition. Thus, cells responded to texture borders between areas differing in the size or the density of texture elements and often revealed differential firing rates to textures differing by the crossing or the terminator feature. For textures with differences in line orientation, however, only small variations of the firing rate were seen. In summary, the observations suggest a means of texture representation in the cat LGN which is different from recent concepts of texture segregation in man. For given pair of textures, cells with receptive fields larger than, or similar to the texture raster respond to global and local luminance variations between areas and, in particular, to differences in their spatial frequency composition. These cells, hence, may signal the global texture difference without encoding spatial details of the pattern from which texton features could be identified. Cells with receptive fields small in comparison to texture elements transfer all the information necessary for analyzing these elements in detail, but themselves are relatively insensitive to global texture differences.
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  • 15
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    Experimental brain research 83 (1990), S. 200-209 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Corpus callosum ; Development ; Vision ; Alternating monocular occlusion ; Cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary During normal postnatal development there is a partial elimination of the callosal projections of cortical areas 17 and 18 in the cat. Visual experience early in life can modulate this process. In the present study, we investigated how restricting visual experience to alternating monocular occlusion affects the development of the callosal connections of cortical areas 17 and 18. Alternating monocular occlusion exaggerates the normally occurring partial elimination of immature callosal projections: it causes a significant reduction in the total number of neurons in the supragranular layers that send an axon through the corpus callosum and marginally increases the distribution of these neurons across areas 17 and 18. Examination of these data in the context of the effects of other types of abnormal early visual experience on the corpus callosum and on the anatomy and physiology of areas 17 and 18 indicates that the postnatal development of the corpus callosum is under the control of multiple, interacting influences which differ in the magnitude and quality of their effects. The data also support the conclusion, drawn from our results in prior studies, that normal visual stimulation is necessary for the stabilization of the normal complement of callosal projections.
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  • 16
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 313-318 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus ; Principal cells ; Cortico-geniculate system ; Frequency enhancement ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Excitatory postsynaptic potentials (EPSPs) were evoked in principal cells of the cat's dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus by electrical stimulation of cortico-geniculate fibres. The EPSPs had a pronounced frequency sensitivity. They were barely detectable at stimulation frequencies below 3 Hz but increased dramatically in size at higher frequencies. At 30–50 Hz their amplitude typically exceeded that of EPSPs from optic tract fibres. A prominent EPSP potentiation was also obtained with pair pulse stimulation. The findings are discussed in relation to the hypothesis that the cortico-geniculate system serves as a variable gain regulator for the visual input to the cortex.
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  • 17
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 373-382 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Contact placing ; Forelimb muscles ; Forelimb movements ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Forelimb trajectory and the activity of eight muscles operating at the elbow, wrist and digit joints were compared during the contact placing reaction, during the swing phase of locomotion and during reactions induced by swing perturbations, to verify the hypothesis that common neural mechanisms are involved in these reactions. Both the patterns of muscle activation and forelimb kinetics during the placing reaction greatly differed from those during the swing phase of locomotion. Both similarities and differences have been found between the placing reaction and the reaction to swing perturbations. Similar latencies, patterns of muscle activation and trajectories have been found for elbow movements while considerable differences were seen in the movements of distal joints. Both reactions started with a backward and upward movement at the proximal joints which was accompanied by a locking at the elbow. At the distal joints, tactile stimuli evoked first a wrist ventroflexion during the placing reaction, whereas they induced wrist dorsiflexion to swing perturbations. A further difference between these two reactions appeared at the beginning of the extension which was highly passive during the reaction to swing perturbation and active during contact placing. These results suggest that some common, most likely spinal, reflexes are involved at the beginning of the two reactions while their extension phases are controlled in a different way.
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  • 18
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 441-446 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: LGN ; Corticofugal feedback ; Moving stimuli ; Texture ; Velocity response curve ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Geniculate cell responses to moving bars and moving texture were compared in normal cats and in cats in which the corticofugal feedback was removed by cortical ablation. In experimental animals the response strength and the velocity upper cutoff assessed with a moving bar was reduced compared to control animals. The strength of response to texture decreased even more after cortical ablation, which also changed the response pattern of X cells to moving texture. These data suggest that corticofugal feedback contributues to the geniculate responses to moving stimuli and in particular to moving texture.
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  • 19
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Interneurons ; Locomotion ; Group II afferents ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Extracellular recordings from interneurons located in the L4 spinal segment were made during fictive locomotion produced by electrical stimulation of the mesencephalic locomotor region (MLR) in the paralysed decerebrate cat. Only interneurons within the L4 segment which received group II input from quadriceps, sartorius or the pretibial flexor muscle afferents and which had axonal projections to motor nuclei in L7 were selected for analysis. During the fictive step cycle two thirds of these interneurons fired action potentials during the time of activity in the ipsilateral hindlimb flexor neurograms. These cells were also less responsive to peripheral input during the extension phase of the fictive locomotion cycle. The remaining one third of the interneurons examined were not rhythmically active during locomotion. The possible contributions of the midlumbar interneurons to motoneuron activity during locomotion are discussed.
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  • 20
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 501-511 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Auditory cortex ; Corticocortical connections ; Cingulate cortex ; Parahippocampal cortex ; Limbic system ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The interconnections of the auditory cortex with the parahippocampal and cingulate cortices were studied in the cat. Injections of the anterograde and retrograde tracer WGA-HRP were performed, in different cats (n = 9), in electrophysiologically identified auditory cortical fields. Injections in the posterior zone of the auditory cortex (PAF or at the PAF/AI border) labeled neurons and axonal terminal fields in the cingulate gyrus, mainly in the ventral bank of the splenial sulcus (a region that can be considered as an extension of the cytoarchitectonic area Cg), and posteriorly in the retrosplenial area. Labeling was also present in area 35 of the perirhinal cortex, but it was sparser than in the cingulate gyrus. Following WGA-HRP injection in All, no labeling was found in the cingulate gyrus, but a few neurons and terminals were labeled in area 35. In contrast, no or very sparse labeling was observed in the cingulate and perirhinal cortices after WGA-HRP injections in the anterior zone of the auditory cortex (AI or AAF). A WGA-HRP injection in the cingulate gyrus labeled neurons in the posterior zone of the auditory cortex, between the posterior ectosylvian and the posterior suprasylvian sulci, but none was found more anteriorly in regions corresponding to AI, AAF and AII. The present data indicate the existence of preferential interconnections between the posterior auditory cortex and the limbic system (cingulate and parahippocampal cortices). This specialization of posterior auditory cortical areas can be related to previous observations indicating that the anterior and posterior regions of the auditory cortex differ from each other by their response properties to sounds and their pattern of connectivity with the auditory thalamus and the claustrum.
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  • 21
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Ponto-geniculo-occipital (PGO) waves ; Peribrachial area ; Central tegmental field ; Superior colliculus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Several experimental results indicate that the peribrachial (PB) cholinergic area of the pedunculopontine nucleus is the final relay for the transfer of brainstem-generated pontogeniculo-occipital (PGO) waves to the thalamus. However, the mechanisms underlying the PGO-related activity of PB neurons remain unknown. In order to study these mechanisms, single unit recordings in the PB area were performed in reserpinized cats. Because PGO waves are closely related to rapid eye movements, our microelectrode explorations were also aimed to some structures of the preoculomotor network, namely, the superior colliculus (SC) and parts of the central tegmental field (FTC). We have found several classes of PGO-on cells in the PB area, most of them descharging 80 ms or less before the peak of PGO waves. These cell-classes comprised high-frequency bursting cells, slow-frequency bursting cells, and neurons discharging single spikes or doublets. Intracellular recordings showed that PGO-on single spikes arise from conventional excitatory postsynaptic potentials. Among PGO-related cells in structures outside the PB limits, it was found that most SC cells discharge during or after the PGO, whereas FTC cells increase their discharge rate several hundreds of ms before PGO waves, thus indicating that PGO waves are elaborated long before the activition of PB neurons. Massive retrograde labeling was found in FTC following horseradish peroxidase injections into the PB area. We suggest that long-lead FTC neurons provide an excitatory input to PGO-on PB neurons.
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  • 22
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 654-658 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Eye muscle receptors ; Ganglionic cells ; Central projection ; Vestibular nuclei ; WGA-HRP ; Double labelling ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The vestibular nuclei of adult cat were injected with retrogradely transported tracers, WGA-HRP or fluorescent Diamidino-Yellow. Labelled cells were found in the caudal half of the ipsilateral mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus, in the area where ganglionic cells of the sensory receptors in the extraocular muscles have previously been described. Double labelling experiments were carried out with Diamidino Yellow injected in vestibular nuclei and Fast Blue in extraocular muscles. Some cells in the mesencephalic trigeminal nucleus were found to contain both tracers, providing evidence that vestibular neurons do receive direct afferent signals from extraocular muscles. Therefore, this anatomical demonstration suggests a direct feed-back control between the extraocular muscle receptors and the vestibular nuclei.
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  • 23
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 417-425 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Direction selectivity ; Directional tuning ; Visual cortex ; Area 17 ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Direction-selective or direction-biased striate cortical neurones were assessed for absence or incidence of suppression of firing, maximal at 90° or 180° (“null” suppression) to the optimal direction, in 327 neurones recorded from the striate cortex of cats anaesthetized with N2O/O2/halothane. Stimuli were light or dark bars moving over uniform or stationary textured back-grounds; or square-wave gratings of optimal spatial frequency and velocity. Five identified directionality groups were correlated with neuronal class and a range of other receptive field properties. Suppression maximal at 90° to optimum was common amongst direction-biased neurones, rare amongst direction-selective neurones. In the latter group, null suppression (maximal at 180° to optimum) was more prevalent than at 90°. Standard complex cells constituted the majority of complex neurones. They were more commonly direction-biased and less commonly showed suppression than special complex cells. The latter comprised the majority of direction-selective neurones with 180° suppression. Endstopping was seen more frequently in special complex cells, but for each functional class was similarly distributed between the different directionality groups. Based on the mean and mode of partially overlapping distributions, for all neuronal classes direction-selective neurones were more broadly tuned than direction-biased neurones. Special complex neurones were appreciably more broadly tuned than standard complex neurones; those with suppression at 180° were the most broadly tuned neurones in the cortex. Direction-biased neurones with suppression at 90° to optimum were more sharply tuned than those lacking such suppression. Direction-selective neurones had larger receptive fields than direction-biased neurones. In both groups receptive fields decreased in size in the sequence: intermediate complex 〉 standard complex 〉 special complex 〉 simple. Resting discharge was highest amongst direction-selective neurones with 180° suppression, lower in those with 90° suppression or those lacking it, and lowest amongst direction-biased neurones. With the possible exception of the minority of neurones that were silent, low levels of resting discharge have not seriously prejudiced either neuronal categorization or comparisons of tuning selectivity. The pattern which emerges is that suppression maximal in directions orthogonal to the preferred direction/orientation is more commonly associated with sharp tuning and directionbias, whereas “null” suppression, in the direction opposite that preferred, is associated with broad tuning, direction-selectivity, high resting discharge levels and strong texture sensitivity.
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  • 24
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 447-461 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: C3-C4 propriospinal neurones ; Forelimb segments ; Lateral reticular nucleus ; Pyramid ; Motoneurones ; Ia inhibitory interneurones ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Collateralization and termination of single C3-C4 propriospinal neurones (PNs) have been studied in the C6-Th1 segments of the cat using two methods: threshold mapping for antidromic activation of C3-C4 PNs and intra-axonal injection of horseradish peroxidase. Low threshold points for antidromic activation of C3-C4 PNs were found in the region of different motor nuclei in lamina IX both at one level and at different segmental levels, in all parts of lamina VII, in the lateral part of lamina VI and in the dorsal and ventral parts of lamina VIII. Collaterals were found from C6 to Th1. A marked decrease of conduction velocity of the stem axon occurred in the caudal region of termination, while it was almost constant in the rostral region of termination. HRP was injected iontophoretically in C6-Th1 into stem axons of neurones, which were activated antidromically from the ventral part of the lateral funiculus in C5/C6, from the lateral reticular nucleus (LRN) and monosynaptically from the corticospinal fibres (stimulated in the contralateral pyramid) which were transected in C5/C6. Reconstruction of successfully stained stem axons, revealed collaterals with terminals on presumed motoneurones in different parts of lamina IX and on interneurones in laminae IV–VIII. These findings confirm previous results which showed monosynaptic projections from C3-C4 PNs to forelimb motoneurones and Ia inhibitory interneurones. With respect to termination in the region of the motoneurones in lamina IX and in the region of Ia inhibitory interneurones in lamina VII, three patterns were found: 1) termination mainly in lamina IX (n=1) 2) termination in laminae IX and VII (n=15) and 3) termination mainly in lamina VII (n=2). However, in some cases the same stem axon gave off collaterals which terminated either on motoneurones in lamina IX or on presumed Ia inhibitory interneurones in lamina VII. Furthermore, when the stem axons had collaterals which terminated in different motor nuclei only some of these collaterals had additional terminations on presumed Ia inhibitory interneurones. This result suggest that C3-C4 PNs do not follow a strict Ia pattern of reciprocal innervation. It is tentatively proposed that the difference of innervation may be related to the type of multi-joint movement, such as target-reaching with the forelimb, which has been shown to be controlled by the C3-C4 PNs. Termination in laminae VI, VIII and different parts of lamina VII indicates that C3-C4 PNs also project to other types of neurones than motoneurones and Ia inhibitory interneurones. Injection of wheat germ agglutinated horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) laterally in laminae VI-VII in C3 and C4 caused anterograde labelling of axonal bundles from neurones in these segments. Labelled axons were found mainly in the lateral funiculus with the highest density in the ventral part. These axons could be traced throughout the forelimb segments and also to the LRN.
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  • 25
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Anterior semicircular canal ; Vestibular nuclei ; Vestibulocollic ; Neck motoneuron ; Unitary IPSP ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Somatic location, axonal trajectories and synaptic effects of inhibitory vestibulocollic neurons which were activated by selective stimulation of the anterior semicircular canal nerve (ACN) were studied in the anesthetized cat. ACN stimulation evoked disynaptic inhibitory postsynaptic potentials (IPSPs) in neck flexor motoneurons. This was seen in all the (64/64) tested motoneurons innervating the ipsilateral (i-) longus capitis (LC) and the i-sternocleidomastoideus (SCM) muscles and in 86% (38/44) of the motoneurons innervating the contralateral (c-) LC muscle. The inhibitory relay neurons, identified by orthodromic and antidromic responses to stimulation of the ACN and the i- and c-LC motoneuron pools, were classified as VCi (vestibulocollic neurons sending an axon to the i-LC motoneuron pool) and VCc (vestibulocollic neurons sending an axon to the c-LC motoneuron pool) neurons. Neither VCi nor VCc neurons were activated antidromically by localized stimulation of the ascending medial longitudinal fasciculus (asc. MLF) or the 3rd nuclei. They were located in the medial, descending and ventral lateral vestibular nuclei. It was also observed that VCi neurons produced unitary IPSPs in i-LC and i-SCM motoneurons in the C1 segment. Inhibitory synapses were estimated to be on the cell somata and/or the proximal dendrites of the motoneurons.
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  • 26
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    Experimental brain research 82 (1990), S. 536-546 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Locomotion ; Interlimb coordination ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Efferent discharges in muscle nerves of the four limbs were recorded simultaneously during spontaneous fictive locomotion in thalamic cats with the goal of understanding how the central nervous system controls interlimb coordination during stepping. The onset of the bursts of activity in the nerve of a selected flexor muscle in each limb allowed the temporal and the phase relationships between the fictive step cycle of a pair of limbs to be determined. Our main results are the following: 1) the fictive step cycles of the two forelimbs are always strictly alternated whereas the phasing of the step cycles of either the two hindlimbs or pairs of homolateral or diagonal limbs is more variable; 2) the time interval between the onsets of the flexor bursts of one of the two pairs of diagonal limbs is independent of the step cycle duration; 3) distinct patterns of interlimb coordination exist during fictive locomotion; a small number of patterns of coordination involving all four limbs, which correspond to the walking and the trotting gaits in the intact cat, occur very frequently. The results demonstrate that the central nervous system deprived of phasic afferent inputs from the periphery has the capacity to generate most of the patterns of interlimb coordination which occur during real locomotion. They further support the view that the central pattern of interlimb coordination essentially results from diagonal interactions between a forelimb generator for locomotion and a hindlimb one.
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  • 27
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Vertical semicircular canals ; Spatial transformation ; Null point analysis ; Interstitial nucleus of Cajal ; Burst-tonic neuron ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Maximal activation directions of vertical burst-tonic and tonic neurons in the region of the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) were examined in alert cats during vertical vestibulo-ocular reflex induced by sinusoidal rotation (at 0.11 Hz±10 deg, or 0.31 Hz±5 deg) in a variety of vertical planes using a null point analysis. The results were compared with the angles of anatomical and functional planes of vertical canals reported by Blanks et al. (1972) and Robinson (1982), and with the angles of vertical eye muscles measured in this study and by Ezure and Graf (1984). 2. Maximal activation directions of 23 cells (21 burst-tonic and 2 tonic neurons) were determined from their responses during rotation in 4 or more different vertical planes. All cells showed sinusoidal gain curves and virtually constant phase values except near the null regions, suggesting that their responses were evoked primarily by canal inputs. Phase values of 5 cells near the null regions depended on the rotation plane, suggesting additional otolith inputs. We used a measurement error range of ±10 deg for calculating the maximal activation directions from the null regions of individual cells and the values of error ranges of null calculation. Of the 23, the maximal activation directions of 7 cells were outside the measurement error ranges of vertical eye muscle angles and within the ranges of vertical canal angles (class A), those of 5 cells were within the ranges of eye muscle angles and outside the ranges of vertical canal angles (class B), and those of the remaining 11 cells were in the overlapping ranges for both angles (class C). Even if only the cells in which 5 or more measurement points were taken to determine maximal activation directions (n = 15), the results were similar. During vertical rotation with the head orientation +60 deg off the pitch plane, dissociation of cell activity and vertical compensatory eye movement was observed in 5 cells in class A or C that had null angles near +45 deg. These results suggest that the cells in class A and B carried individual vertical canal and oculomotor signals, respectively, although it is difficult to tell for the majority of cells (class C) which signals they reflected. Some cells in class A and C were antidromically activated from the medial longitudinal fasciculus at the level of abducens nucleus, suggesting that the signals carried by these cells may be sent to the lower brainstem. 3. Most burst-tonic neurons did not respond to horizontal rotation; significant responses were obtained in only 3 of 10 cells tested for which the gain was only 14–17% of their maximal vertical gain. There was no clear difference in gain or phase values of the responses to vertical rotation, or in eye position sensitivity (during spontaneous saccades) between cells whose responses coincided with individual vertical canal angles and those matching the angles of vertical recti muscles. The values of phase lag (re head acceleration during pitch rotation) and eye position sensitivity of these cells are still smaller compared to those of extraocular motoneurons reported by Delgado-Garcia et al. (1986), although they were larger than those of secondary vestibulo-ocular neurons (Perlmutter et al. 1988). All these results suggest that the signals carried by burst-tonic and tonic neurons in the INC region are different from oculomotor signals. 4. Similar analysis was done for comparison for 19 other cells that did not show close correlation with spontaneous eye movement but whose activity was clearly modulated by pitch rotation (pitch cells). More than a half (10/19) had maximal activation directions outside the measurement error ranges of individual vertical canal angles, and many shifted towards roll. Horizontal rotation produced responses with higher gain than burst-tonic neurons, suggesting a difference in the spatial response properties of burst-tonic and tonic neurons on one hand and pitch cells on the other.
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  • 28
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vertical eye movement ; Burst-tonic neuron ; Tonic neuron ; Interstitial nucleus of Cajal ; Saccade ; Vestibulo-ocular reflex ; Temporal conversion ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary (1) Discharge characteristics of neurons in the region of the interstitial nucleus of Cajal (INC) were studied in alert cats during spontaneous or visually induced eye movement and sinusoidal vertical (pitch) rotation. Activity of a majority of cells (n = 68) was closely related to vertical eye position with or without bursting activity during on-direction saccades. They were called vertical burst-tonic (n = 62) and tonic (n = 6) neurons. Mean discharge rates for individual cells when the eye was near the primary position ranged from 35 to 133 (mean 75) spikes/s with a coefficient of variation (CV) ranging from 0.04 to 0.29 (mean 0.15). Average rate position curves were linear for the great majority of these cells with a mean slope of 3.9 ± 1.2 SD spikes/s/deg. (2) The burst index was defined as the difference in discharge rate between maximal rate during an on-direction saccade and the tonic rate after the saccade. The values of mean burst index for individual cells ranged from 8 to 352 (mean 135) spikes/s. Tonic neurons had a burst index lower than 60 spikes/s and were distributed in the lower end of the continuous histogram, suggesting that burst-tonic and tonic neurons may be a continuous group with varying degrees of burst components. During off-direction saccades, a pause was not always observed, although discharge rate consistently decreased and pauses were seen when saccades were made further in the off-direction toward recruitment thresholds. Significant positive correlation was observed between average discharge rate during off- as well as on-direction saccades and tonic discharge rate after saccades for individual cells, which was not due to cats making saccades mainly from the primary position. (3) During pitch rotation at 0.11 Hz (±10 deg), burst-tonic and tonic neurons had mean phase lag and gain of 128 (±13 SD) deg and 4.2 (±1.7 SD) spikes/s/deg/s2 relative to head acceleration. During pitch rotation of a wide frequency range (0.044–0.495 Hz), the values of phase lag were mostly constant (120–140 deg), while simultaneously recorded vertical VOR showed the mean phase lag of 178 deg. Vertical eye position sensitivity and pitch gain (re head position) showed significant positive correlation. (4) Comparison of the discharge characteristics of vertical burst-tonic and tonic neurons with those of secondary vestibulo-ocular neurons (Perlmutter et al. 1988) and extraocular motoneurons (Delgado-Garcia et al. 1986) in alert cats suggests that signals carried by burst-tonic and tonic neurons are partially processed signals in vertical VOR and saccades, and different from oculomotor signals. (5) The INC region also contained many cells that did not belong to the above groups but whose activity was clearly modulated by pitch rotation (called pitch cells for the present study, n = 44). Many (n = 23) showed some correlation with vestibular quick phases, and some (n = 12) with visually elicited eye movement, although they showed significantly lower and more irregular discharge rates than burst-tonic and tonic neurons (mean discharge rate when the eye was near the primary position 34, range 3–91, spikes/s; mean CV 0.61, range 0.15–1.7). During pitch rotation they showed the mean phase lag and gain of 119(±26 SD) deg and 3.2(±2.1 SD) spikes/s/deg/s2. Some cells showed a much lower phase lag of about 90 deg. (6) More than half the burst-tonic, tonic and pitch cells tested were antidromically activated by stimuli applied to the ponto-medullary medial longitudinal fasciculus at the level of abducens nucleus, while none of them were activated from the inferior olive, suggesting that vertical eye position signals carried by some burst-tonic and tonic neurons are carried to the lower brainstem.
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  • 29
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 257-266 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Serotonin ; Area 17 ; Postnatal development ; Immunohistochemistry ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The laminar distribution and postnatal development of profiles immunoreactive to antibodies directed against serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine, 5-HT) have been investigated in the primary visual cortex (striate cortex, area 17) of cats. In the adult cat, profiles with serotonin-like immunoreactivity consist exclusively of fibers which exhibit laminar differences in density and predominant orientation. Immunoreactive fibers are dense in layers I–III, less dense in layer V, and sparse in layers IV and VI. In layers I and VI the trajectories of these fibers are mainly tangential to the pial surface; in layers II–V they are predominantly radial and more irregular. The vast majority of immunoreactive fibers consists of fine axons with frequent small varicosities. In addition, there are a few thick axons. In 2-week-old cats, immunoreactive fibers are sparsely distributed through layers II–V. By 4 weeks, fiber density has decreased still further in layer IV and increased in layers I–III. By 6 weeks, the laminar pattern resembles that of adult cats except that fiber density is still lower than in adults. At three months of age, the mature pattern is established.
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  • 30
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    Experimental brain research 82 (1990), S. 617-627 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Corpus callosum ; Visual acuity ; Spatial frequency threshold ; Striate cortex ; Development ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Following section of the corpus callosum at 1–6 postnatal weeks in cats, behavioral visual acuity was measured binocularly and monocularly from 6–29 postnatal weeks; physiological determination of spatial frequency thresholds of single striate cortical cells was performed when the cats were at least 8 months old. Results were compared between cats with callosum section at each postnatal week, as well as with normal cats. Cats with callosotomy at 1–3 postnatal weeks had deficits in behavioral visual acuity, and the deficits were greatest in the youngest operated cats. Cats with callosotomy at 1–2 postnatal weeks failed to resolve as high spatial frequencies as did normal cats, and the resolution of the 1 week operated cats was lower than the resolution of the 2 week operated cats. Cats with callosotomy at 3–6 postnatal weeks had spatial frequency thresholds that were equivalent to those of normal cats. To determine what kinds of striate cells had reduced spatial resolution following neonatal corpus callosum section, cells were categorized according to class (Simple, Complex), receptive field location (Central, Peripheral), and monocular behavioral acuity eye performance (Better Eye, Worse Eye). Cats with corpus callosum section during postnatal week 1 had the lowest spatial resolution for all cell categories compared to all groups tested. However, cats with callosum section during postnatal week 2 had normal spatial frequency thresholds for Simple, Central and Better Eye categories. The cats with callosum section in postnatal weeks 3–6 had normal spatial frequency thresholds for all cell categories. For corpus callosum sectioned cats with and without visual deficits, and for normal cats, visual acuity measured behaviorally is significantly related to visual acuity measured physiologically. The results show that neonatal corpus callosum section in cats can affect behavioral visual acuity, as well as the spatial frequency thresholds of many categories of striate cortical cells. However, callosum section at different ages affects different populations of cortical cells. Furthermore, the results suggest that neonatal corpus callosum section may directly affect a single fundamental property of cells in primary visual cortex with a resulting disruption of many visual functions.
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  • 31
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Pyramidal cells ; Nonpyramidal cells ; Cortico cortical fibers ; Sensory-motor ; Intracellular recording ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The population of neurons in the cat motor cortex which receives monosynaptic input from a specific functional region of the somatic sensory cortex was identified with the techniques of intracellular recording and staining with HRP. Both pyramidal and nonpyramidal cells located in the superficial layers of the pericruciate cortex responded to stimulation of the sensory cortex with short latency, excitatory postsynaptic potentials. More than half of the labeled cells were classified as pyramidal cells and the remainder as sparsely spinous or aspinous nonpyramidal cells. The characteristics of the EPSP's of the 2 groups of cells, ie. latency, time from beginning to peak and amplitude were found to vary only slightly. The results suggest that input from the sensory cortex impinges upon neurons which may in turn have an excitatory or inhibitory effect on corticofugal neurons in the motor cortex.
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  • 32
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Nucleocortical ; Corticonuclear ; Cerebellar nuclei ; Cerebellar zonation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The projection from the intracerebellar nuclei to the paravermal (intermediate) cerebellar cortex of lobule Vb/c has been investigated in the cat using a combined electrophysiological and neuroanatomical technique. A small (10–30 nl) injection of WGA-HRP was made into one of the three paravermal zones (c1, c2 or c3) after the mediolateral boundaries of the zones had been delimited on the cerebellar surface by recording climbing fibre field potentials evoked in response to percutaneous stimulation of one or more paws. The distribution of retrogradely labelled cell bodies within the intracerebellar nuclei was compared with the distribution of terminal labelling arising from anterograde transport by cerebellar Purkinje cells. The three paravermal zones displayed marked heterogeneity in their receipt of a projection from the intracerebellar nuclei. The c1 and c3 zones received virtually no such input, although injections in either zone resulted in significant terminal labelling (which was largely restricted to nucleus interpositus anterior). By contrast, the intervening c2 zone received a much heavier nucleocortical input which arose almost exclusively from nucleus interpositus posterior (to which the zone also projected). A sparse contralateral nucleocortical input to the c2 zone was also demonstrated. This arose primarily from nucleus fastigius. It is concluded that the nucleocortical projection to the paravermal cortex of lobule Vb/c displays marked topographical specificity and some functional implications of this are discussed.
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  • 33
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neuropeptide ; Plasticity ; Nerve injury ; Spinal cord ; Immunohistochemistry ; Cat ; Rat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary By use of fluorescence immunohistochemistry it is shown that sciatic nerve section in cat and rat induces increased levels of immunoreactive calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) in axotomized motoneurons. In the rat, this effect was clearly seen at 2–5 days postoperatively, but could not be demonstrated after 11–21 days. These findings are discussed in relation to previously proposed roles for CGRP in motoneurons.
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  • 34
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 582-588 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Contrast ; Spatial summation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Non-linearities of spatial summation were examined in simple cells in the cat's striate cortex. The degree of non-linearity was assessed from an examination of the waveforms of the responses to moving sinusoidal gratings and was quantified by a measure called relative modulation. Relative modulation was affected little by changes in contrast at either optimal or non-optimal spatial frequencies. The non-linearities of spatial summation exhibited by some simple cells are, therefore, essential. Those simple cells which exhibit linear spatial summation are no less linear at high stimulus contrasts. These results support a ‘push-pull’ model of simple cell receptive field organization in which ON and OFF centre l.g.n. input is combined both additively and subtractively.
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  • 35
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 623-632 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Optokinetic nystagmus ; Ferret ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The aim of this study was to evaluate the functional significance of similarities observed in the anatomy and the physiology of cat and ferret visual systems. Optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) in response to movement of the entire visual field, and optokinetic after nystagmus (OKAN) were measured in 8 ferrets with binocular stimulation. A shift of the beating field in the same direction as the fast phase of eye movements was observed both in ferret and cat. The absence of a fast rise in slow phase velocity (SPV) and similarities in the time constant to reach the steady state OKN gain, using step velocity stimuli are noted. As in the cat, primary OKAN was observed with a gradual decrease in its SPV. Following termination of stimulation, no sudden fall in SPV was noted for either species. However, for the ferret, the decrease was more rapid. With monocular stimulation, small differences were observed in OKN gain when responses to temporonasal and nasotemporal directions of the stimulus were compared in the two species. In contrast, the ferret displays a OKN gain which is approximatively twice that of the cat at stimulus velocities of 100°/sec. Even at 200°/sec., visual movement still induces a discernable OKN response (gain.0.07). Secondary OKAN, always present in the cat, was observed in only 43% of ferret records. Taken together with other considerations, these findings recommend the ferret as an alternative to the cat for the study of OKN and of other visuo-motor capacities in carnivores.
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  • 36
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Target-reaching ; Walking ; Transneuronal transport ; Wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase ; Last order interneurones ; Motoneurones ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Transneuronal transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase was used to define the location of last order spinal interneurones projecting to deltoideus motoneurones during voluntary target-reaching and/or in unrestricted walking on the ground. Labelled interneurones were found bilaterally from C2 to Th1 in target-reaching cats and almost exclusively in the C5-Th1 segments in walking cats, although the total number of labelled interneurones in these cats was considerably higher than in the target-reaching cats. These results confirm the previous finding that propriospinal neurones in the C3–C4 segments can mediate the descending command for target-reaching movements with the forelimb. In both groups of cats labelled interneurones were found ipsilaterally in laminae V–IX, while contralaterally they were mainly restricted to lamina VIII. In the forelimb segments there was a larger number of labelled interneurones in the walking cats in the lateral part of laminae V–VII and in laminae VIII and IX. There was a positive, almost linear correlation between the total number of labelled interneurones and motoneurones in all cats. The results suggest that both excitatory and inhibitory last order interneurones can be transneuronally labelled. It is concluded that this method can be used for functional identification of last order interneurones active during the preparation and/or execution of different movements.
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  • 37
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 135-147 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vision ; Striate cortex ; Receptive field specificity ; Spatial summation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In single neurones recorded from the striate cortex of cats anaesthetized with N2O/O2/halothane, receptive field dimensions, length specificity and areal extent of drive were assessed for different classes of visual stimuli. Receptive fields were mapped as rectangular minimum response fields (MRFs). Spatial summation along the axis of preferred orientation was assessed: for moving bars whose length was varied (length summation); and for height variation of a square-wave grating patch against a uniform grey background, or a patch of moving texture against a stationary background of similar texture. In complementary tests a moving square-wave grating background was progressively occluded by a uniform grey foreground mask of variable height; or a mask of stationary texture of variable height progressively occluded a background of moving texture. In parallel measurements, the width of grating or textured patches or masks was varied whilst maintaining height constant. Broadly speaking, the areal influence of each class of stimulus was comparable, and distinct from extra-receptive field phenomena in evoking responses from within the receptive field, but not from surrounding areas. The masking paradigm provided the most sensitive measure of receptive field height and width. However, in some neurones length summation, the degree of endstopping, and the directional bias depended critically on the stimulus configuration used. Length summation tended to be more dramatic for short bars than for gratings. Length summation for texture was significantly more pronounced than for an oriented bar in special and in intermediate complex neurones. By contrast, endstopping was typically less intense for gratings than for bars, and least pronounced for texture. Because of stimulus specificity, complex neurones assigned to particular functional subgroups on the basis of their response to oriented bars may exhibit quite different patterns of behaviour for other classes of stimuli.
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  • 38
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Motoneurones ; Last order interneurones ; Transneuronal transport ; Wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Transneuronal transport of wheat germ agglutinin conjugated horseradish peroxidase (WGA-HRP) was used to define the location of last order spinal interneurones projecting to deltoideus motoneurones in C5–C8 of the cat. Labelled interneurones were found bilaterally from rostral C1 to caudal Th5 and from L3 to the L4/5 border. Ipsilaterally they were located in laminae V–IX, while contralaterally they were confined to lamina VIII except for a few cells in laminae VII and IX. To estimate the degree to which inter-neuronal activity facilitates the transneuronal transport from deltoideus motoneurones, the numbers of labelled interneurones were compared under different experimental conditions after WGA-HRP injection. The number of labelled last order interneurones was larger in one awake and active cat than in one awake but inactive cat and also larger in six anaesthetized animals in which spinal pathways were stimulated to evoke antidromic and synaptic activation of the interneurones, than in two anaesthetized animals without stimulation. It is concluded that the transneuronal transport of WGA-HRP is considerably facilitated by increased activity in the last order interneurones. An overall tendency was observed for a positive correlation between the number of labelled interneurones and the number of primarily stained deltoideus motoneurones. In order to reach a detectable concentration of WGA-HRP in the last order interneurones a certain number of motoneurones has to be labelled to the extent that they appear homogenously black.
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  • 39
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Spike train analysis ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A previously unexploited method of examining neural spike-trains was applied to data obtained from cells in the visual cortex. Distributions of interspike intervals recorded extracellularly from cat visual cortex under four conditions were analyzed. Stimuli were gratings differing in orientation and spatial frequency. The probability density function of first passage time for a random walk with drift process, which is defined by its barrier height and drift coefficient, was used to characterize the generating process of axonal discharge under resting and stimulus conditions. Drift coefficient and barrier height were derived from the sample mean and standard deviation of the measured inter-spike intervals. For cells with simple receptive fields, variations in the drift coefficient were produced by changes in orientation and spatial frequency. Variations in barrier height were produced only by changes in orientation of the stimulus.
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  • 40
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Recticulospinal neurones ; Pons ; Neck ; Tectum ; Cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1. Projections of reticulospinal neurones (RSNs) in the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (N.r.p.c.) to dorsal neck motoneurones supplying splenius (SPL, lateral head flexor) and biventer cervicis and complexus (BCC, head elevator) muscles were studied in the cat anaesthetized with pentobarbiturate or α-chloralose. 2. Threshold mapping for evoking antidromic spikes revealed that most of RSNs tested projecting down to brachial segments but not to lumbar segments (C-RSNs) gave off collaterals to the gray matter of the upper spinal cord in C2–C3 segments. 3. Spike triggered averaging showed that negative field potentials were evoked after firing of a single C-RSN (single fibre focal synaptic potentials, FSPs) in the region of C2–C3 where large antidromic field potentials from nerves supplying SPL or BCC muscles were evoked. The single fibre FSPs ranged between 1 and 10 μV in amplitude and had latencies between 0.7 and 1.2 ms from the onset of the triggering spike. In most cases, a presynaptic spike preceded the negative potential by 0.3 ms. These results indicated that C-RSNs project to the SPL or BCC motor nucleus. 4. Spike triggered averaging of postsynaptic potentials revealed EPSPs (single fibre EPSPs) in 36 dorsal neck motoneurones, predominantly in SPL (25) and less in BCC (11) motoneurones, evoked from 15 C-RSNs. The amplitude of the single fibre EPSPs ranged from 5 to 310 μV, and had latencies of 0.8–2.0 ms from the onset of the triggering spikes of C-RSNs, or 0.3–0.5 ms from the presynaptic spike when recorded. The results indicated monosynaptic excitatory connexions of C-RSNs to dorsal neck motoneurones. 5. Single fibre EPSPs from a C-RSN were usually recorded from either BCC or SPL motoneurones but not from both types of motoneurones, when tested in many motoneurones. This showed that connexions of C-RSNs with dorsal neck motoneurones were muscle specific. 6. RSNs projecting down to the lumbar segment (L-RSN) also showed branching in C2–C3 segments. Excitatory monosynaptic connexion of L-RSNs with neck motoneurones were demonstrated by recording single fibre postsynaptic population potentials (p.s.p.p.s.) from the C2 ventral root perfused with sucrose. The probability of evoking monosynaptic single fibre p.s.p.p.s. was less (19%) than for C-RSNs (59%).
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  • 41
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 441-445 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Lateral geniculate nucleus ; Visual cortex ; Receptive field ; Spatial phase ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We recorded single neuron responses in the cat's lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) and visual cortex to compound stimuli composed of two sinusoidal gratings in a 2∶1 frequency ratio. To probe visual receptive field symmetry, we varied the relative spatial phase of the two components and measured the effect on neuronal responses. We expected that on-center LGN neurons would respond best to gratings combined in positive cosine (bright bar) phase, while off-center LGN neurons would respond best to gratings combined in negative cosine (dark bar) phase. When drifting stimuli were used, cells' phase preferences were roughly 90 deg away from the expected values; when stationary, contrast-modulated stimuli were used, phase preferences were as originally predicted. Computer simulations showed that this discrepancy could be explained by taking into account the cells' temporal properties. Thus, tests using drifting stimuli confound the spatial structure of visual neural receptive fields with their temporal response characteristics. A small sample of data from cortical neurons reveals the same confound.
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  • 42
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 59-69 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Optokinetic reflex ; Stroboscopic illumination ; Cat ; Monkey ; Man
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The horizontal optokinetic reflex (OKN) was studied in cat, monkey and man under conditions of steady or stroboscopic illumination. In all species, there was an abrupt decrease in OKN gain for a given spatial displacement of the stimulus between two consecutive stroboscopic flashes. The upper limit of spatial displacement which preserved optimal OKN gain was independent of stimulus velocity and flash frequency. The value of this limit differed in the three species studied. In the cat, OKN gain was affected when the spatial displacement between two stimuli exceeded 0.55° of visual angle. In monkey and man, these limits were 1.48° and 2.87°, respectively. When human subjects were asked to voluntary track the stimulus, the limit value reached 4.3°. This result is discussed in the context of the evolution of the smooth pursuit system and its contribution to optokinetic response.
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  • 43
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 515-529 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Parietal cortex ; Thalamo-cortical projection ; Tooth pulp ; Nociception ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Responses of cells in the midsuprasylvian gyrus (MSSG) of cats were investigated following electrical stimulation of the central lateral nucleus (CL) of the thalamus and tooth pulp, low-threshold cutaneous or visual afferents. Electrical stimulation in CL induced excitation in many cells located in cortical areas 5 and 7. Cells in these areas also received input from somato-sensory and visual afferents. Cells in MSSG showed a wide convergence from tooth pulp, low-threshold cutaneous afferents and from the CL. The majority of wide convergent cells in area 5 were found in layers IV and V, while cells excited by CL and tooth pulp were found in layers II and III. Similarities were found between CL and tooth pulp evoked responses with regard to the excitation-inhibition pattern. The excitation evoked from CL and tooth pulp was less often followed by a hyperpolarizing potential compared to that seen after low-threshold lip, paw and visual afferent stimulation. Stimulation sites in the lateral parts of CL-evoked responses with the shortest latencies in area 5. In this part of the cortex, short latency synaptic potentials were found in cells in superficial layers. In the same area, synaptic potentials of short latency were also evoked by electrical stimulation of tooth pulp, lip and paw. Light-flash stimulation evoked responses with the shortest latencies in area 7. The results of this study demonstrate that putative nociceptive information reaches the parietal association cortex and that part of this input may be relayed via CL. We suggest that the excitatory influences of nociceptive and CL stimulation is related to behavioral arousal and attention mechanisms.
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  • 44
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 547-563 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Neurotransmitter ; Colocalization ; Vestibular nuclei ; Immunocytochemistry ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The distributions of five amino acids with well-established neuroexcitatory or neuroinhibitory properties were investigated in the feline vestibular complex. Consecutive semithin sections of plastic-embedded tissue were incubated with antisera raised against protein-glutaraldehyde conjugates of GABA, glycine, aspartate, glutamate and taurine. This approach allowed us to study the relative densities of the different immunoreactivities at the level of individual cell profiles. The results indicate that in the vestibular nuclei, neuronal colocalization of two or more neuroactive amino acids is the rule rather than an exception. Colocalization was found of immunoreactivities for GABA and glycine; glycine, aspartate and glutamate; glycine and aspartate, and glutamate and aspartate. GABA immunoreactive neurons were generally small and were found scattered throughout the vestibular complex. Glycine immunoreactive neurons were similarly distributed, except in the superior nucleus where the latter type of neuron could not be detected. Neuronal profiles colocalizing immunoreactivities for GABA and glycine occurred in all nuclei, but were most numerous in the lateral nucleus. The vast majority of the neurons showed noteworthy staining for glutamate and aspartate, although the level of immunoreactivities varied (e.g., the large neurons in the lateral and descending nuclei were more intensely aspartate immunoreactive than the smaller ones). Taurine-like immunoreactivity did not occur in neuronal cell bodies but appeared in Purkinje cell axons and in glial cell profiles. The functional significance of the complex pattern of amino acid colocalization remains to be clarified. In particular it needs to be distinguished between metabolic and transmitter pools of the different amino acids. The present results call for caution when attempts are made to conclude about transmitter identity on the basis of amino acid contents alone.
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  • 45
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 615-622 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Strabismic amblyopia ; Visual cortex ; Acuity ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The acuities of cells in the primary visual cortex of five tenotomized strabismic cats were measured. Previous behavioural studies have shown such animals to possess a severe amblyopia of approximately 1.5 octaves of spatial frequency, yet the acuities of both retinal ganglion and lateral geniculate X-cells are normal. The receptive fields of the cortical cells sampled were within 5° of the area centralis projection. On average, the acuities of cortical cells driven by the amblyopic eye were nearly 1 octave less than those for the non-deviating eye. However, the best cell acuities for each eye were nearly the same. The relationship between ocular dominance and cell acuity was found to be different for the two eyes despite a symmetrical ocular dominance distribution. The acuity deficit for cells driven through the amblyopic eye was present at all depths along the electrode tracks. We conclude that in this model amblyopia, the initial spatial processing deficit lies in the visual cortex, and most probably in the cells of layer IV. Further-more, the presence of a few cells driven by the amblyopic eye which can perform nearly as well as those from the fellow eye in processing high spatial frequencies gives new insight into the way in which strabismic and deprivation amblyopias differ.
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  • 46
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 12-22 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Somatosensory cortex ; VPL ; Intracellular recording ; Pyramidal neuron ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A total of 141 pyramidal neurons in the cat primary somatosensory cortex (SI) were recorded intracellularly under Nembutal anesthesia (7 in layer II, 43 in layer III, 8 in layer IV, 58 in layer V and 25 in layer VI). Most neurons were identified by intracellular staining with HRP, though some layer V pyramidal neurons were identified only electrophysiologically with antidromic activation of medullary pyramid (PT) or pontine nuclear (PN) stimulation. Excitatory synaptic potentials (EPSPs) were analyzed with stimulation of the superficial radial nerve (SR), the ventral posterolateral nucleus (VPL) in the thalamus and the thalamic radiation (WM). The pyramidal neurons in layers III and IV received EPSPs at the shortest latency: 9.1±2.1 ms (Mean+S.D.) for SR and 1.6±0.7 ms for VPL stimulation. Layer II pyramidal neurons also responded at a short latency to VPL stimulation (1.7±0.5 ms), though their mean latencies for SR-induced EPSPs were relatively longer (10.6±1.9 ms). The mean latencies were much longer in layers V and VI pyramidal neurons (10.2±2.4 ms and 2.9±1.5 ms in layer V pyramidal neurons and 9.9±2.5 ms and 2.8±1.6 ms in layer VI pyramidal ones, respectively for SR and VPL stimulation). The comparison of the latencies between VPL and WM stimulation indicates that most layer III–IV pyramidal neurons and some pyramidal cells in layers II, V and VI received monosynaptic inputs from VPL. These findings are consistent with morphological data on the laminar distribution of thalamocortical fibers, i.e., thalamocortical fibers terminate mainly in the deeper part of layers III and IV with some collaterals in layers V, VI and II-I. The time-sequences of the latencies of VPL-EPSPs indicate that corticocortical and/or transcallosal neurons (pyramidal neurons in layers II and III) fire first and are followed by firing of the output neurons projecting to the subcortical structures (pyramidal neurons in layers V and VI).
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  • 47
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 175-186 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Reticulospinal neurons ; Spinal projection ; Tectum ; Cerebral peduncle ; Hindlimb motoneurons ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary 1 The pathway mediating disynaptic tectal and pyramidal excitation of hindlimb motoneurons was analyzed in cats anesthetized with αchloralose or pentobarbital. Stimulation of the contralateral tectofugal fibers induced EPSPs in flexor and extensor hindlimb motoneurons (118/171). EPSP latencies, measured from the monosynaptically evoked descending volley, were 0.8 ms or less in 34 of the 118 motoneurons, suggesting disynaptic linkage from the tectum. The latencies tended to be shorter in motoneurons innervating proximal muscles than in those innervating distal muscles. 2. Stimulation of the cerebral peduncle induced EPSPs only in a small proportion of motoneurons (7/32). But the peduncular stimulation exhibited a marked facilitatory effect on the tectal EPSPs in most of the tested motoneurons (23/27), showing convergence of tectal and peduncular inputs onto relay cells. 3. In animals whose pyramid was transected, the tectal EPSPs were still facilitated by peduncular stimulation in 45 of 48 tested motoneurons. The time course of facilitation indicated convergence of tectofugal and corticofugal fibers onto brainstem relay neurons. 4. Projection of single neurons in the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (NRPC) to the gray matter of the hindlimb segments was examined by mapping thresholds of antidromic activation. Twelve of 13 tested neurons were excited by contralateral tectal stimulation at short latencies, probably monosynaptically. Four of them were found to project to lamina IX. Two of the 3 tested neurons projecting to lamina IX were found to receive excitatory input from the cerebral peduncle. 5. Stimulation of NRPC induced monosynaptic EPSPs in hindlimb motoneurons. In 19 motoneurons, the NRPC-induced monosynaptic EPSPs were facilitated by a conditioning tectal shock. This indicated that the tectal stimulus lowered thresholds of direct activation of cell bodies of premotor NRPC neurons. The time course of the facilitation indicated that the NRPC neurons received monosynaptic tectal excitation. The results provide strong evidence that NRPC neurons are involved in mediating disynaptic tectal excitation of hindlimb motoneurons.
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  • 48
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 271-282 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; 17/18 border ; Retino-topic map ; Orientation map ; Ocular dominance map ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The representation of the visual field in the 17/18 border region of the cat's visual cortex, and the layout of orientation and ocular dominance columns, were studied by making many closely spaced electrode penetrations into the superficial layers of the flattened dorsal region of the marginal gyrus and recording response properties at each location. The 17/18 border region was defined by measuring the change in the horizontal component of receptive field position within the gyrus: as the position of the recording electrode moved from medial to lateral, the receptive fields moved towards the vertical midline, indicating that the electrode was in area 17; as penetrations were made in increasingly lateral positions, the trend reversed, and receptive field positions moved away from the midline, indicating that the electrode was in area 18. The receptive fields of cells close to the border straddled, or lay within 2°–3° on either side of the vertical midline. In addition, patches of cortex were sometimes encountered in which cells had receptive field centers located up to 7° in the ipsilateral visual field. Experiments in which maps were made in the left and right hemispheres of a single animal showed that these patches had a complementary distribution in the two hemispheres. Cells within the patches behaved as though driven by Y-cell inputs: they usually had large receptive fields and responded to rapidly-moving stimuli. They were broadly tuned for orientation and strongly dominated by the contralateral eye. Fourier spectral analysis of orientation selectivity maps showed that iso-orientation bands had an average spacing of 1.14 ± 0.1 mm and tended to be elongated in a direction orthogonal to the 17/18 border. Individual bands crossed the border without obvious interruption, although singularities (points of discontinuity in the layout of orientations) were more frequently observed in the border region than in adjacent areas. Two dominant periodicities could be measured in the maps of ocular dominance, one at around 0.8 ± 0.2 mm and a second at 2.0 ± 0.3 mm. No constant direction of elongation was noted. These are close to the periods present within areas 17 and 18 respectively.
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  • 49
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 412-426 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Red nucleus ; Sensori-motor control ; Spino-rubral pathway ; Intracellular recordings ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Although it has been known for a long time that in awake cats, natural stimulation of the skin induces short latency responses in rubrospinal cells, the pathway possibly involved has been identified only recently (Padel et al. 1988). This tract, which was described in acute, chloralose anaesthetized cats, ascends in the ventromedial spinal cord and is activated via collaterals of primary afferent fibres running in the dorsal columns of the spinal cord. The present study demonstrates that this newly described spino-rubral tract is able to send detailed somaesthetic information to the red nucleus. After lesions leaving intact only the spino-rubral pathway, excitatory and inhibitory responses to natural peripheral stimulations were recorded in identified rubral efferent cells. The most effective stimuli were touching the skin, passive joint rotation and hair displacement. Each cell was found to possess a particular receptive field. These fields which could be ipsi-, contra-, or bi-lateral were generally located on a single limb, although they could include two or more limbs, or even exceptionally the whole body with or without preferential zones. The topographic organization of receptive fields was arranged somatotopically in the red nucleus and overlapped the motor representation. The somaesthetic inputs transmitted through the spino-rubral pathway to the red nucleus are very similar to those previously observed in the intact cat, which supports the idea that this pathway may play a functional role in motor control. The spino-rubro-spinal loop may provide a fast adaptation of the descending motor command, thus producing a fine and harmonious tuning between the changing surroundings and the animal's movements.
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  • 50
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    Experimental brain research 79 (1990), S. 651-660 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Inverse dynamics ; Step-cycle kinematics ; Swing-phase kinetics ; Coordination ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary To determine speed-related changes in hindlimb motion that might account for the mutability of bifunctional (hip extensor/knee flexor) muscle activity during the E1 phase of swing, we studied hip and knee joint kinematics and kinetics during swing over a ten-fold increase in locomotor speed (0.35 to 3.5 m/s). Three cats were filmed (100 frames/s) while locomoting on a motorized treadmill; kinematics were analyzed for the entire step cycle and kinetics for the swing phase. During swing, angular excursions at the hip and knee joints were similar for walking and trotting, but hip flexion and extension were significantly less after the transition from trot to gallop, while knee-angle range of motion increased during gallop phases E1, E2, and E3. During swing, knee-extension velocity peaked early in E1 and increased linearly with speed, while hip-flexion velocity peaked late in the flexion (F) phase and also increased linearly, but decreased precipitously at the trotgallop transition and remained constant as speed of galloping increased. Muscle torque directions during E1, flexor at the knee and extensor at the hip, were consistent with the proposed role of bifunctional posterior thigh muscles to decelerate thigh and leg segments for paw contact. At the knee joint, muscle torque during E1 counteracted a large interactive torque due to leg angular acceleration; the magnitudes of both torques were speed related with maximal values at the fastest speed tested (3.5 m/s). At the hip joint, muscle torque during E1 also counteracted a large interactive torque due to leg angular acceleration; the magnitudes of these two torques were speed related during the walk and trot, and like hip flexion velocity, decreased at the trot-gallop transition. Our data on speed-related changes in hindlimb dynamics suggest that the E1 burst amplitude (and perhaps duration) of posterior thigh muscles will be speed related during the walk and trot. After the trot-gallop transition at about 2.5 m/s, the recruitment of these bifunctional muscles may decline due to the changes in hindlimb dynamics. Because activity of these muscles counteracts interactive torques primarily related to leg angular acceleration, we suggest that motion-related feedback decoding this action may be important for regulating recruitment during E1.
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  • 51
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 23-33 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Synaptic plasticity ; Sprouting ; Corticocortical synapses ; Functional recovery ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The effects of unilateral lesions of the deep cerebellar nuclei on the corticocortical (CC) projection from the somatosensory to the motor cortex were studied in adult cats, utilizing electrophysiological and electron microscopical methods. Axon terminals in the motor cortex belonging to CC afferents were labeled by degeneration induced by lesions of the somatosensory cortex; neurons in the motor cortex were labeled by the Golgi/EM method. In each cat, data from the motor cortex (MCx) contralateral (experimental) and ipsilateral (control) to the cerebellar lesion were compared. Cerebellar lesions produced marked motor deficits, which receded gradually and disappeared after 30 to 40 days. Subsequent lesions of the somatosensory cortex (area 2) contralateral to the cerebellar lesions resulted in the reappearance of the cerebellar symptoms. The number of CC synapses per unit area in experimental MCx was significantly higher than in control MCx. The increase in the number of CC synapses was apparent throughout layers II–V of the MCx, but was most prominent in layers II/III. The increase in the number of CC synapses in experimental MCx was due mainly to an increase of axon terminals synapsing with dendritic spines belonging to pyramidal neurons. In comparison, the numbers and spatial distribution of CC synapses with aspinous, nonpyramidal neurons from both experimental and control MCx were similar. Field potentials in the experimental MCx, evoked by stimulation of area 2, were altered following cerebellar lesions. In experimental MCx, the polarity of the early component of the field potentials reversed at cortical depths corresponding to layers II–III, whereas this reversal was not observed in control MCx. These findings suggest that lesions of the cerebellar nuclei induced sprouting of axon terminals in the MCx to establish a new function. The results provide the first anatomical evidence for the generation of new synapses in the adult CNS which is not induced by elimination of existing synapses.
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  • 52
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Local circuits ; Recurrent collaterals ; Axonal varicosities ; Zones ; Lobule V ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Purkinje cells in zones a and b of the vermis and zone c in the intermediate cortex of the anterior lobe were intracellularly injected with horseradish peroxidase and the distribution patterns of the varicosities present on their axonal collaterals were quantified and compared at the light microscopic level. The data derived from this study reveal that each individual axonal arbor had a unique pattern of distribution. However, certain principles of distribution could be applied to the collaterals regardless of the cortical location of the parent cell, including the following: 1) the total number of varicosities derived from the axonal collaterals of individual Purkinje cells is relatively uniform; 2) the collateral plexi have a greater extent in the sagittal plane as compared to the transverse plane; 3) the majority of varicosities remain within 200–300 μm of the parent cell in both the sagittal and transverse planes; 4) there is a heterogenous distribution of varicosities within the area traversed by the axonal branches; and 5) the majority of varicosities are located within the Purkinje cell layer. Although there were similarities in the pattern of distribution for collaterals, there were also variations which distinguished the plexi in the three zones. The collaterals of zone a cells tended to be the most confined in both the sagittal and transverse planes. In contrast, several cells in zone b and c had branches that extended for relatively long distances in the sagittal plane. In zone b the collaterals have an asymmetric distribution around the cell of origin in the transverse plane. In zones a and c there is a tendency for a more symmetric pattern of distribution in this plane. The similarities in the number and laminar distribution of varicosities, as well as the predominantly sagittal orientation of the collaterals in all zones of the cerebellar cortex suggest that the collaterals subserve a common function throughout the cerebellar cortex. However, variations indicate that there may be subtle differences in the way recurrent collaterals process information in the cerebellar cortex that may be related to the functional heterogeneity or the location of the targets of the collaterals in the three zones analyzed.
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  • 53
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Reticulospinal neurones ; Tectum ; Cortex ; Neck ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Dorsal neck motoneurones receive disynaptic tectal and pyramidal EPSPs via common reticulospinal neurones (RSNs). This study was aimed at identification of the RSNs projecting directly to neck motoneurones and mediating these EPSPs. 1. Stimulation of the tectum and the cerebral peduncle evoked monosynaptic descending volleys in the spinal cord, which were chiefly mediated by reticulospinal neurones in the pons and the medulla. Systematic tracking of the C3 and C7 segments was made to locate descending volleys in the spinal funiculi. The tectal monosynaptic volley was largest in the medial part of the ventral funiculus and decreased gradually as the recording electrode was moved to the lateral part of the ventral funiculus and the lateral funiculus. In contrast, the peduncle-evoked monosynaptic volley was distributed rather evenly in the ventral funiculus and the ventral half of the lateral funiculus. 2. Differences in funicular distribution of the two descending volleys suggest the existence of subgroups of RSNs which differed in strength of inputs from the two descending fibre systems and in the funicular location of descending axons. 3. The RSNs were classified into the following four groups; (1) mRSNs which descended in the medial part of the ventral funiculus, (2) in RSNs which descended in the ventrolateral funiculus, (3) 1RSNs which descended in the dorsal 2/3 of the lateral funiculus and (4) coRSNs which descended in the contralateral funiculi. The mRSNs were located in a fairly localized region corresponding to the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis (N.r.p.c.), while inRSNs, 1RSNs and coRSNs were mainly in the nucleus reticularis gigantocellularis (N.r.g.), in the nucleus reticularis magnocellularis (N.r.m.) and in the nucleus reticularis ventralis (N.r.v.). RSNs were further divided into three types depending on the levels of projection. L-RSNs projected to the lumbar spinal segments. C-RSNs descended to the C6–C7 spinal segment but not to the lumbar segments. N-RSNs projected to the C3 but not to the C6–C7 segments. 4. Stimulation of the tectum and the cerebral peduncle produced monosynaptic negative field potentials in the medial two thirds of the reticular formation in the pons and medulla. Tectal field potentials were largest in the N.r.p.c. and the rostral part of the N.r.g., while pyramidal field potentials were largest in the N.r.g. Correspondingly, RSNs in the N.r.p.c. (mRSNs) received larger monosynaptic EPSPs from tectal than from pyramidal volleys, while RSNs in the N.r.g. (in-, 1- and coRSNs) received stronger input from the peduncle than from the tectum. 5. Stimulation of the C7 ventral but not the lateral funiculus evoked monosynaptic EPSPs on all the dorsal neck motoneurones tested. Stimulation of the L1 segment only produced monosynaptic EPSPs in 35% of the motoneurones. The L1 evoked EPSPs were much smaller than C7 evoked EPSPs. 6. The C7 evoked EPSPs (C7 EPSP) showed complete occlusion (collision) with the tectal or pyramidal disynaptic EPSPs. Similar results were obtained with L1 EPSPs. These results indicate that tectal and pyramidal disynaptic EPSPs in dorsal neck motoneurones were mediated chiefly by C-mRSNs and C-inRSNs and partly by L-RSNs.
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  • 54
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 221-233 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vision ; Motion perception ; Photic responsiveness ; Extrastriate cortex ; Suprasylvian cortex ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A total of 783 cells were studied extracellularly in anterior (A10–13), posterior (A4–8), and intermediate regions (A8. 1–9.9) of Clare-Bishop (CB) cortex of the cat, which were defined according to the anteroposterior coordinate of the stereotaxic axis and probably corresponded to the antero- (AMLS), postero-medial lateral suprasylvian cortex (PMLS), and the border region between the two subareas, respectively. The study was conducted under N2O anesthesia supplemented with continuous infusion of short-lasting anesthetics (Saffan, Glaxo or Etomidate, Janssen), using three types of visual stimulators presenting two- (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) motion stimuli, and visual cues contained in the 3D motion. Neuronal responsiveness was essentially similar between the anterior and posterior CB subdivisions. Both areas contained 1) AP, 2) RC and 3) FP cells, selectively responsive to approaching, recessive and fronto-parallel motion, and 4) NS and 5) U cells, nonselectively responsive and unresponsive to any of these motions. However, a quantitative difference was found: 1) In the posterior CB the FP cell population was the largest, and the frequency reduced in the order of AP, NS, RC and U cells, while the largest population in the anterior CB consisted of the AP and U cells, and the frequency reduced in the order of FP, RC and NS cells. 2) 3D (AP and RC) cells in the posterior CB responded preferentially to approaching motion at a distal range, while those in the anterior CB preferred motion at a proximal range. 3) The 3D cells in the posterior CB were more sensitive to the motion cue and demonstrated lower thresholds for the size cue than the anterior CB cells. 4) The anterior CB cells generally demonstrated high-pass velocity tuning (cut-off around 10°/s) for monocular 2D stimulation, while the posterior CB cells demonstrated a broad band-pass tuning (4–120°/s). These findings suggest functional differentiation in neuronal representation of 3D motion signals between the two subdivisions of CB cortex.
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  • 55
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vertical saccade ; Forel's field H ; Saccaderelated neuron ; Mono- and disynaptic excitatory input ; Superior colliculus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Excitatory inputs to neurons in the Forel's field H (FFH) related to visually induced vertical saccades from the ipsilateral superior colliculus (SC) were investigated in chronically prepared alert cats. By stimulation of the deep or intermediate layer of the SC, upward augmenting neurons (ANs) and one long-lead downward burst neuron (BN) were found to be activated monosynaptically, while medium-lead BNs were activated disynaptically. The monosynaptically activated neurons were not antidromically activated from the oculomotor nucleus, whereas disynaptically activated neurons were also activated antidromically from the inferior rectus subdivision of the nucleus. These results suggest that an excitatory input to the FFH from the SC for inducing vertical saccades of visual origin first reaches upward ANs and/or long-lead downward BNs in the FFH, which in turn drive medium-lead BNs in the same area synapsing with motoneurons related to vertical eye movements.
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  • 56
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 491-499 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Intralaminar thalamus ; Interneurons ; Projection neurons ; Golgi impregnation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary The existence of Golgi type II neurons was verified in the anterior intralaminar central lateral (CL) nucleus of the cat thalamus, and its projection cell types were identified, by means of Golgi impregnation. CL principal neurons were found to display a large- or medium-sized cell body and a radiate dendritic pattern. Their primary dendrites were limited in number, and had a rather long course; they were poorly ramified. The axons of principal neurons were impregnated only occasionally and for a short distance. Projection neurons of the ‘bushy’ or tufted type, described in the main thalamic sensory nuclei, were not identified in the CL in the present study. Typical Golgi type II neurons were found throughout CL. They were mainly small-sized, and displayed a rich dendritic arborization characterized by dendritic appendages. The axons of Golgi type II neurons were seen to give rise to extensive local arborizations. The present findings indicate that in the cat CL, principal cells are mainly represented by radiate neurons. Typical local circuit neurons also are evident in CL, suggesting that the activity of anterior intralaminar structures is regulated by intrinsic mechanisms similar to those operating in the main thalamic relay nuclei.
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  • 57
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: GABA ; Microinjection ; Red nucleus ; Motor control ; Reaction time ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Interneurons in the Red Nucleus (RN) are known to be under cortical control and to exert an inhibitory action, mediated by GABAergic mechanisms, on the main output towards the spinal cord. The effects of discrete injections of a GABA receptor agonist (muscimol) or an antagonist (bicuculline) in the Red Nucleus were tested on a motor task performed by seven cats. The subjects were trained to release a lever with a flexion movement of the forelimb controlled by a reaction time (RT) paradigm. Muscimol as well as bicuculline increased RTs in a dose-dependent manner at doses below 100 ng. However the parameters of the force exerted on the lever were differentially altered by the two drugs. Muscimol increased RTs by slowing down the force change preceding movement as well as slightly delaying its latency. While bicuculline increased drastically the force change latency. It could also speed up the force change velocity for low doses. At higher doses (up to 500 ng) both drugs produced an arrest of the performance either associated with anxiety signs (bicuculline) or dystonic movements of the head followed by body rotations (muscimol). The strong motor impairments as well as the disruption of the conditioned performances following muscimol or bicuculline microinjection in the RN suggest an important functional role for GABAergic interneurons. Under the control of cortical afferences they can modulate rubrospinal activity and participate in the triggering of a conditioned movement.
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  • 58
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    Experimental brain research 83 (1990), S. 164-171 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Muscle spindle ; Fusimotor ; Afferent ; Intrafusal contraction ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Responses of secondary endings of muscle spindles of the peroneus tertius muscle of the anaesthetized cat have been recorded during repetitive stimulation of functionally single fusimotor fibres that produced slowing of the discharge. In a sample of 125 pairs of single fusimotor fibres and secondary spindle afferents 5 examples of slowing were seen. The amount of slowing became less at longer muscle lengths. Conditioning the spindle by stimulating the muscle nerve at fusimotor strength, at a length 2.5 mm longer than the test length, and then returning to the test length 3 seconds later led to a greater degree of slowing of the discharge than after conditioning stimulation at the test length. With one exception, responses to muscle stretch were reduced during stimulation of a fusimotor fibre that produced slowing. On two occasions stimulating a fusimotor fibre that produced slowing of the response of one secondary ending, led to excitation of two other endings. Two possible explanations for the generation of slowing responses have been considered. The first is that the slowing is the result of contraction of the region of intrafusal fibre directly underlying the secondary sensory ending. The second, which we favour since it accounts for the facts more adequately, is that slowing is the result of shortening of the region of nuclear chain fibres on which the sensory ending lies, produced by movement in an adjacent nuclear bag fibre.
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  • 59
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    Experimental brain research 80 (1990), S. 626-630 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Visual cortex ; Orientation tuning ; Inhibition ; Local inactivation ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We investigated the contributions of lateral intracortical connections to the orientation tuning of area 17 cells using micro-iontophoresis of the inhibitory transmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) to inactivate small cortical sites in the vicinity of a recorded cell. GABA was ejected from an array of micropipettes each with an average horizontal distance of 500 μm from the recording site. Of 54 cells tested, 33 showed a reduction and 3 a loss of orientation selectivity due to an increase in responses to non-optimal orientations during GABA inactivation. The response to the optimal orientation remained constant in more than half of the cells and increased or decreased in others. Given that a complete cycle of orientations occupies a tangential distance of 1000 μm, the observed broadening of orientation tuning is presumably due to GABA-mediated inactivation of inhibitory interneurones with different preferred orientations from those of their target cell.
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  • 60
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 552-566 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Superior sagittal sinus ; Middle meningeal artery ; Craniovascular ; Nociception ; Single units ; Thalamus ; Ventroposteromedial nucleus ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Extracellular recordings were made in the thalamus of cats anaesthetized with chloralose and urethane following electrical, mechanical and chemical stimulation of the superior sagittal sinus or middle meningeal artery. Facial receptive fields were looked for using electrical and mechanical stimuli. The locations of fifty-six cells were verified histologically. Twenty six cells were located in the ventroposteromedial nucleus (VPM) and six in its ventral periphery (VPMvp). All units in VPM had facial receptive fields, usually involving the first trigeminal division. Cells with nociceptive receptive fields or responding to the craniovascular application of bradykinin were often found in the periphery or “shell” region of VPM. Other craniovascular nociceptive cells were found in VPMvp, in the posterior group and in the intralaminar complex. This study shows that craniovascular afferents in the cat project to several thalamic nuclei and implicate VPM especially in craniovascular nociception.
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  • 61
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 438-442 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Thalamus ; Visual system ; Calcium conductance ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary We obtained good intracellular recording from 5 W cells in the C-laminae of the cat's lateral geniculate nucleus. The recordings were made from an anesthetized and paralyzed in vivo preparation. We found a consistent pattern for the postsynaptic potentials evoked from activation of the optic chiasm: first was an IPSP followed by an EPSP. This is very different from the pattern seen in X and Y cells, for which an EPSP always appears first and is then followed by an IPSP. We interpret the pattern for W cells as follows. The initial IPSP is disynaptic; this involves retinogeniculate conduction over very fast Y axons and a relay through an interneuron. The EPSP is monosynaptic, reflecting retinogeniculate conduction over very slow W axons. A possible implication for this is that activity over the Y pathway may generally inhibit geniculate W cells before these W cells can be excited by their retinal afferents. Finally, we elicited from each of these W cells voltage-dependent, low threshold spikes, which are very similar to those displayed by X and Y cells. These spikes can interrupt normal retinogeniculate transmission, and they are prevented by maintaining relatively depolarized membrane potentials.
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  • 62
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    Experimental brain research 81 (1990), S. 602-608 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Golgi tendon organ ; Motor unit ; Gastrocnemius ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary In one medial gastrocnemius muscle of each of several cats, the response was recorded of a single tendon organ to the contraction of a single motor unit which strongly excited the receptor. The motor unit was depleted of its glycogen and the depleted muscle fibres identified in PAS-stained transverse sections. The site of maximum tendon organ sensitivity was marked and the tendon organ identified in the same sections. Five pairs of tendon organs and motor units were studied completely. Each tendon organ was found to have one or two (mean 1.6) depleted muscle fibres attached to it, included in the bundle of fibres attached to the end (mean no. 14.4) and side (mean no. 5.6) of the tendon organ. A correlation was found between tendon organ discharge rate and the tension calculated from cross-sectional area measurements of the depleted muscle fibres attached to the tendon organ, with variation between individual pairs of tendon organs and motor units. One estimate of the average sensitivity of the sample was 28 imp/s/mN. A nearly linear discharge rate vs. tension relation was found for single tendon organ and motor unit pairs when tension was graded during a series of fatiguing contractions. Under these conditions the sensitivity, measured as the slope of the relation between discharge rate and motor unit tension recorded at the common tendon, varied between 0.11 and 0.30 imp/s/mN for 6 pairs.
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  • 63
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    Experimental brain research 105 (1990), S. 345-362 
    ISSN: 1432-1106
    Keywords: Vestibulospinal reflexes ; Vestibulocollic reflex ; Cervicocollic reflex ; Directionality ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Electromyographic activity of dorsal neck muscles and neck torques was recorded to study vestibulocollic, cervicocollic, and combined reflexes in alert and decerebrate cats during rotations of the whole body, the body except for the head, and the head but not the rest of the body. Cats were rotated about many axes that lay in the frontal, sagittal, and horizontal planes using sinusoidal 0.25-Hz waveforms or sum-of-sinusoid waveforms. Robust electromyographic responses were recorded from six muscles, with response directionality that in most cases did not show strong dependence on the reflex tested or on other factors including exact neck angle, stimulus amplitude from 5° to 60°, and intact versus decerebrate state. Based on the strength of responses to rotations about all the tested axes, neck muscles could be characterized by maximal activation direction vectors representing the axis and direction of rotation in threedimensional space that was most excitatory during reflex responses. Responses to rotations about axes that lay in a coordinate plane were predicted by a cosine function of the angle between the axis under test and the maximally excitatory axis in the plane. All muscles were excited by the nose down phase of pitch rotation and by yaw and roll away from the side on which the muscle lay. Biventer cervicis was best activated by rotations with axes near nose-down pitch, and its axis of maximal activation also had small, approximately equal components of yaw and roll toward the contralateral side. Complexus was best excited by rotations with axes nearest roll, but with large components along all three axes. Occipitoscapularis was best excited by rotations about axes near pitch, but with a moderately large contralateral yaw component and a smaller but significant contralateral roll component. Splenius was best excited by rotations with a large component of contralateral yaw, considerable nose-down pitch, and a smaller component of contralateral roll. Rectus major was best excited by rotations near nose-down pitch, but with a substantial contralateral yaw component and smaller contralateral roll component. Obliquus inferior was best excited by rotations with a large component of contralateral yaw, but with considerable contralateral roll and nose-down pitch components. All muscles responded as though they received convergent input from all three semicircular canals. Vestibulocollic and combined reflex responses in alert cats and vestibulocollic, cervicocollic, and combined responses in decerebrate cats appeared to have the same directionality, as evidenced by insignificant shifts in maximal activation vectors. Cervicocollic responses in alert cats were inconsistent and often absent, but appeared upon decerebration, suggesting that higher centers suppress the cervicocollic reflex in intact animals. Decerebration and partial cerebellectomy had no significant effect on maximal activation directions, although electromyographic response magnitudes increased after each. The results suggest that common circuits or strategies are used by neck stretch and vestibular-neck reflexes. The reflex excitation directions do not match the mechanical actions of the neck muscles but agree fairly well with previously published predictions of a mathematical model of neck motor control.
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  • 64
    ISSN: 1432-2072
    Keywords: Tianeptine ; Amitriptyline ; Attention ; Beta rhythms ; Frontoparietal cortex ; Quantitative ECoG ; Cat
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Tianeptine, an antidepressant substance devoid of sedative action, was investigated for its effects on focalization of attention in cats, using combined behavioural and electrocorticographic (ECoG) observations. The ECoG index was the presence of 40 Hz frontoparietal rhythmic cortical activities, developing while the animal displayed a behaviour suggesting focused attention. Cats were observed in two conditions: a “neutral” one, with no specific target, and another one, “of focused attention” where a live mouse placed in a transparent box was present in the recording room, each test lasting for 90 min. After treatment the animals displayed increased attention even in the neutral situation, where the cat, instead of sleeping like during control sessions, payed sustained attention to its environment. Conversely, at corresponding doses, amitriptyline, another antidepressant drug chosen as a reference, induced uninterrupted slow sleep even in the situation of focused attention.
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    European archives of psychiatry and clinical neuroscience 240 (1990), S. 28-33 
    ISSN: 1433-8491
    Keywords: Anticholinergic ; Dementia ; Psychopharmacology ; Geriatrics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Integrity of central cholinergic neurotransmission is essential for adequate cognitive functioning. Many psychotherapeutic medications have anticholinergic side-effects. In order to determine the impact of circulating anticholinergic activity on cognitive performance, 28 geropsychiatric inpatients underwent cognitive testing at different levels of anticholinergic serum activity. In 10 subjects with a diagnosis of probable Alzheimer's disease, significant deterioration of selected cognitive functions was observed at anticholinergic serum levels that caused no dysfunction in the 18 non-demented subjects. The data suggest that non-demented elderly patients with psychiatric problems tolerate psychotropic pharmacotherapy without significant negative impact on their cognitive competency. By contrast, patients with Alzheimer's disease are at risk of additional impairment. The introduction of anticholinergic serum activity as a monitoring technique for safe psychopharmacotherapy in geriatric patients is discussed.
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  • 66
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Cat ; Urinary bladder ; Parasympathetic ganglion neurone ; Slow inward current ; Late slow outward current
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract Single-electrode voltage-clamp techniques were used to examine membrane currents recorded as a result of hyperpolarizing pre-pulses in cat bladder parasympathetic neurones. In 84 ganglion cells examined, two types of current were observed in response to hyperpolarizing pre-pulses of 10 ms to 1 s duration from holding potentials of −30 to −60 mV to test potentials of −90 to −130 mV. In 46 cells, a short-duration pulse induced a slow inward current (SIC); with longer pulse durations, an outward current was superimposed on the SIC, resulting in a late slow outward current (LSOC). In the remaining cells, either a SIC (n=12) or an LSOC (n=26) was recorded over a range of hyperpolarizing pre-pulse durations. The more depolarized the holding potential, the more hyperpolarized the test potential and the longer the pulse duration, the larger the amplitude of the SIC and LSOC. The SIC and LSOC were associated with an increase in input conductance. The extrapolated reversal potential (V rev) for the LSOC obtained at a holding potential of −60 mV (where the LSOC seemed to be less contaminated with the SIC) was −89±4 mV (mean ± standard error of the mean; n=5), which is close to the equilibrium potential for the K ion. The LSOC was depressed by a high-K (10–20 mM) solution and potentiated by a low-K (0.47 mM) solution. The SIC was depressed by a low-Na (26.2 mM) solution, but was not affected significantly by a low-Cl (12.2 mM) solution. A low-Ca (0.1 mM)/high-Mg (5 mM) solution depressed the LSOC, while a high-Ca (5 mM) solution potentiated it. Cd (0.5 mM) blocked the SIC almost completely, and suppressed the LSOC. The LSOC but not the SIC was suppressed by tetraethylammonium chloride (10 mM). Superfusing Cs (3 mM) did not affect either the LSOC or the SIC. 4-Aminopyridine (1 mM) and muscarine (10 μM) depressed or replaced the SIC with an outward current, while potentiating the LSOC. These results suggest that a hyperpolarizing pre-pulse induces slow inward Na- and late slow outward Ca-dependent K currents, which are inactivated at depolarized potentials and are de-inactivated by hyperpolarizing pulses in a time-dependent manner.
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  • 67
    ISSN: 1432-0878
    Keywords: Nasal mucosa ; Neuropeptide Y (NPY) ; Vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) ; Peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI) ; Noradrenaline ; Sympathetic/parasympathetic innervation ; Pig ; Cat ; Guinea-pig ; Rat ; Man
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Biology , Medicine
    Notes: Summary The occurrence of neuropeptide Y (NPY), vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) and peptide histidine isoleucine (PHI) in the sympathetic and parasympathetic innervation of the nasal mucosa was studied in various species including man. A dense network of NPY-immunoreactive (IR) fibres was present around arteries and arterioles in the nasal mucosa of all species studied. NPY was also located in nerves around seromucous glands in pig and guinea-pig, but not in rat, cat and man. The NPY-IR glandular innervation corresponded to about 20% of the NPY content of the nasal mucosa as revealed by remaining NPY content determined by radioimmunoassay after sympathectomy. These periglandular NPY-positive fibres had a distribution similar to the VIP-IR and PHI-IR nerves but not to the noradrenergic markers tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) or dopamine-β-hydroxylase (DBH). The NPY nerves around glands and some perivascular fibres were not influenced by sympathectomy and probably originated in the sphenopalatine ganglion where NPY-IR and VIP-IR ganglion cells were present. The venous sinusoids were innervated by NPY-positive fibres in all species except the cat. Dense NPY and DBH-positive innervation was seen around thick-walled vessels in the pig nasal mucosa; the latter may represent arterio-venous shunts. Double-labelling experiments using TH and DBH, and surgical sympathectomy revealed that the majority of NPY-IR fibres around blood vessels were probably noradrenergic. The NPY-positive perivascular nerves that remained after sympathectomy in the pig nasal mucosa also contained VIP/PHI-IR. The major nasal blood vessels, i.e. sphenopalatine artery and vein, were also densely innervated by NPY-IR fibres of sympathetic origin. Perivascular VIP-IR fibres were present around small arteries, arterioles, venous sinusoids and arterio-venous shunt vessels of the nasal mucosa whereas major nasal vessels received only single VIP-positive nerves. The trigeminal ganglion of the species studied contained only single TH-IR or VIP-IR but no NPY-positive ganglion cells. It is concluded that NPY in the nasal mucosa is mainly present in perivascular nerves of sympathetic origin. In some species, such as pig, glandular and perivascular parasympathetic nerves, probably of VIP/PHI nature, also contain NPY.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 37-55 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Fully automatic three-dimensional mesh generation is a fundamental requirement for automating the numerical solution of partial differential equations. Two techniques in particular - the octree and Delaunay approaches - have been used towards this end. A method that combines both approaches to fully automatic mesh generation is presented here. The resulting algorithm provides the linear growth rate and divide-and-conquer approach of the octree method with the simplicity and optimal properties of the Delaunay triangulation.
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  • 69
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Adopting an updated Lagrange approach, the general framework for the fully non-linear analysis of curved shells is developed using a simple quadrilateral C0 model (HMSH5). The governing equations are derived based on a consistent linearization of an incremental mixed variational principle of the modified Hellinger/Reissner type with independent assumptions for displacement and strain fields. Emphasis is placed on devising effective solution procedures to deal with large rotations in space, finite stretches and generalized rate-type material models. In particular, a geometrically exact scheme for configuration update is developed by making use of the so-called exponential mapping algorithm, and the resulting element was shown to exhibit a quadratic rate of (asymptotic) convergence in solving practical shell problems with Newton-Raphson type iterative schemes. For the purpose of updating the spatial stress field of the element, an ‘objective’ generalized midpoint integration rule is utilized, which relies crucially on the concept of polar decomposition for the deformation gradient, and is in keeping with the underlying mixed method. Finally, the effectiveness and practical usefulness of the HMSH5 element are demonstrated through a number of test cases involving beams, plates and shells undergoing very large displacements and rotations.
    Additional Material: 13 Ill.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 483-514 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Some constitutive and computational aspects of finite deformation plasticity are discussed. Attention is restricted to multiplicative theories of plasticity, in which the deformation gradients are assumed to be decomposable into elastic and plastic terms. It is shown by way of consistent linearization of momentum balance that geometric terms arise which are associated with the motion of the intermediate configuration and which in general render the tangent operator non-symmetric even for associated plastic flow. Both explicit (i.e. no equilibrium iteration) and implicit finite element formulations are considered. An assumed strain formulation is used to accommodate the near-incompressibility associated with fully developed isochoric plastic flow. As an example of explicit integration, the rate tangent modulus method is reviewed in some detail. An implicit scheme is derived for which the consistent tangents, resulting in quadratic convergence of the equilibrium iterations, can be written out in closed form for arbitrary material models. All the geometrical terms associated with the motion of the intermediate configuration and the treatment of incompressibility are given explicitly. Examples of application to void growth and coalescence and to crack tip blunting are developed which illustrate the performance of the implicit method.
    Additional Material: 10 Ill.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 599-617 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: This study, dealing with model reduction for thermal diffusion, describes the numerical techniques used: the Eitelberg, Marshall and aggregation methods. The non-linear model of a heat transmission tube, to which these methods are applied, is then described, pointing out the necessary initial algebraic treatment for reduction. Finally the outputs of the complete model and of several reduced ones are compared for some characteristic variations of the inputs. For this problem, the Eitelberg and Marshall methods, which can be used with a high coefficient of reduction, are well adapted.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 699-717 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The Finite Element Iterative Method (FEIM) is extended to the analysis of asymptotic fields of materials with non-linear behaviour. It is used in the investigation of the asymptotic field of an interfacial crack of power law hardening materials. The material is assumed to deform according to the total deformation theory of plasticity. The results of the analysis provide evidence to support the hypothesis that the asymptotic field can be cast in the form of the HRR-singularity multiplied by a function of the product form. This function can be written as a series of oscillatory functions, similar to those encountered in an elastic field, each of which is valid over a substantial range of the process zone. The real part of these terms depends on the loading mode, process zone size as well as material properties; it is, however, very small compared to the HRR-singularity. The imaginary part which gives the phase shift is much smaller than the elastic value and is a weak function of the hardening power and the size of the process zone of interest; it eventually vanished at extremely small distances.
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  • 73
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 775-783 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Force fields computed directly from strains calculated in a displacement type finite element description of a structural element of varying sectional rigidities show extraneous oscillations. The origin of these oscillations is traced to the fact that the displacement type finite element procedure determines strains derived from the displacement field in a least squares correct sense and that force resultants computed using these strain fields and the actual sectional rigidities result in unwanted oscillations. It is necessary to introduce the concept of redistributed assumed force resultant fields that maintain a ‘consistent’ relationship to the strain fields and also are orthogonal to these strain functions. In this paper, the Hu-Washizu theorem is invoked to justify the introduction of an orthogonally correct reconstituted assumed force resultant field which will then be free of extraneous oscillations. The quadratic isoparametric tapered bar element serves to illustrate the underlying principles.It follows that the extremely general Hu-Washizu principle is the most practical procedure of implementing an assumed force resultant, assumed strain displacement type formulation to introduce consistency and thereby remove problems associated with field-inconsistency (such as cause locking in constrained media elasticity) and force resultant oscillations due to varying sectional properties.
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  • 74
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 801-809 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: New 8-node solid elements with two parallel faces and one traction-free cylindrical surface are derived using the assumed stress hybrid model. Six new expressions of stress components are developed by using four stress functions and cylindrical co-ordinates, so that the normal stress σz on the plane perpendicular to the two parallel faces varies as a parabola, and the assumed stress field satisfies the equilibrium equations as well as the traction-free conditions over the cylindrical boundary. The assumed stress field also satisfies the compatibility conditions when the new element is degenerated into the 2-dimensional case. Examples have clearly demonstrated that these present special elements are far superior in predicting the stress concentration factors, the distributions of circumferential stresses and the normal stress σz.
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  • 75
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 861-880 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Explicit integration across the thickness for three-dimensional degenerated shell finite elements is analysed. For this purpose a modifed formulation is proposed. The Jacobian matrix of the physical-parameter spaces transformation is decomposed into a product of ‘in-middle-surface’ and ‘out-of-middle-surface’ terms. This enables an expansion to be carried out of the strain-displacement matrix into power series of the thickness variable. Explicit integration is then performed and the corresponding formulae of the stiffness and mass matrices are given. The possibility of ‘locking’ for thin structures is explained. The analysis is applied to homogeneous and multilayered structures. Numerical applications for linear problems are given in the last part of the paper.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 913-933 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Non-linear responses of dam-reservoir systems are not well understood, because of the lack of an exact time-domain solution for the far field (extending to infinity) of the fluid. This paper presents a procedure for efficient time-domain analyses. It is based on a semi-analytical solution and is suitable for the determination of the interactive behaviour of dam-reservoir systems.In this formulation, the fluid domain is divided into a near (to the dam) field, which is finite, and a far field extending to infinity. Arbitrary shapes of the upstream face of the dam, and of the bottom of the reservoir floor in the near field, are presumed. Furthermore, the far field is assumed to have a constant depth. The irregular near field is modelled by using the finite element method. A time-domain semi-analytical solution is obtained for the far field. For a vertical dam subjected to earthquake and ramp loadings, numerical solutions obtained compared well with the piecewise exact form of the analytical solution.
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  • 77
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1003-1020 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: An improved formulation for solving 2D transient scalar wave propagation problems by the Boundary Element Method (BEM) is presented. The kernels presented are simpler and better behaved than those that have appeared in the published literature. An appropriate set of temporal shape functions for linear variation is used. For spatial variations isoparametric quadratic elements are used. All of these represent significant improvements over the present level of sophistication in the analysis of 2D transient scalar problems. The algorithm is implemented in a general purpose boundary element code known as GPBEST.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1049-1063 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: A new method of modelling the radiation effect in a time-domain finite element analysis of semi-infinite solids is proposed. The domain to be analysed is divided into a finite, interior region and a semi-infinite, exterior region. The standard finite elements are used to model the interior region. An infinite element is used to model the semi-infinite region. The main feature of the proposed method is the selection of semi-infinite shape functions to develop the infinite element. A procedure is proposed whereby the necessary shape functions are derived directly from frequency-domain analytical mode shapes. The interior and exterior regions are coupled by enforcing displacement continuity at the interface. The validity of the method is demonstrated in this paper by analysing a two-dimensional, linear (damped), anti-plane, shear-wave (plane Love-wave) propagation problem. The results obtained by the proposed method are compared with those obtained by direct finite element analysis with a fixed boundary placed sufficiently far from the location of loading to avoid wave reflections.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 141-159 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The Lanczos algorithm has proved to be a powerful solution method not only for finding the eigenvalues but for solving linear systems of equations. In this work a new implementation of the algorithm is presented for solving linear systems of equations with a sequence of right-hand sides. The versions of the method proposed in the past treat the right-hand side vectors successively by keeping the tridiagonal matrix and the orthonormal basis in fast or secondary storage. The new technique handles all approximations to the solution vectors simultaneously without the necessity for keeping the tridiagonal matrix or the orthonormal basis in fast or secondary storage. Thus, when the first solution vector has converged to a required accuracy good approximations to the remaining solution vectors have simultaneously been obtained. It then takes fewer iterations to reach the final accuracy by working separately on each of the remaining vectors.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 197-209 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: This paper presents the development of a finite element analysis based on an anisotropic model of continuum damage mechanics theory proposed recently by the authors for ductile fracture under non-proportional loading. The condition of non-proportional loading is formulated by introducing a dynamic co-ordinate system of principal damage allowing the principal direction of damage during the loading to rotate accordingly.The finite element analysis developed under non-proportional loading is applied to predict the crack initiation load of a centre-cracked plate under uniform loading. The predicted load agrees satisfactorily with those determined experimentally with centre-cracked thin plates made of aluminium alloy 2024-T3. The analysis also reveals under non-proportional loading the hysteresis effect of the principal directions of damage and stress. In addition, the influence of varying anisotropic damage coefficients on the crack initiation load and the crack tip displacement profile is also examined. The larger the degree of the anisotropy, the higher the crack initiation load. The magnitude of the crack tip displacement profile is found to be proportional to the degree of material anisotropy.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 449-452 
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  • 82
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 473-482 
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    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: This paper presents an alternative to the subspace iteration and Lanczos techniques, both of which are now used to solve partial eigenvalues and eigenvectors of large generalized linear first order symmetric matrix systems. It is based on non-linear optimization of a modified Rayleigh quotient. The elements of the eigenvector are the decision variables. Orthogonality constraints with respect to the two matrices are incorporated in the sequential unconstrained optimization scheme. By imposing normality with respect to one of the matrices, the Hessian matrix reduces to a much simpler form for which the Woodburry transformation may be used. This, in combination with the fact that the banded structure of the matrices is maintained, results in a number of operations of the same order as the two standard methods. Shifting is readily integrated. Numerical comparison with existing techniques demonstrate the practicality of this method.
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  • 83
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 453-472 
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    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: The superposition of a rigid body mode on a body should result in a corresponding change in displacement values but should not affect the stresses. However, in the numerical solution by the boundary element method (BEM) large errors may be obtained for displacements and stresses if a rigid body mode is present in the input data. To eliminate the effects of the rigid body mode on the numerical accuracy of the solution, the fundamental solutions for displacements must be correctly interpreted and used. The rigid body mode may be unknowingly present in the boundary condition data. It may be present because the boundary data are not known accurately. Or it may be present if the displacement values at the support have been computed from a separate analysis. A rigid body mode may arise due to the collocation nature of satisfying the boundary conditions. The point values of the applied load at the collocation point may not satisfy equilibrium. Or the point values of the specified displacements may not satisfy the condition of zero translation and rotation. For bodies under pure traction, we know that the analytical solution can contain an arbitrary amount of rigid body mode. Numerically, however, some unknown value is assigned to this rigid body mode. It might be desirable (for example in limit analysis) to eliminate the rigid body mode from the displacements to obtain deformation of a point with respect to a point on the body. In addition, knowledge and elimination of the rigid body mode is necessary for the implementation of a scheme described by this author in an earlier work. The importance of the earlier work is that it reduced the sensitivity of the BEM to changes and errors in the input data. In this paper the causes, and the effects of the rigid body mode on the BEM, the correct interpretation of the fundamental solution for displacements and an algorithm for determining and accounting for the rigid body mode are discussed. A numerical example validates the ideas in this paper for the indirect version. The algorithm for the direct version is presented without a numerical example in the Appendices.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 559-578 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: A panel method using source and doublet singularity has been proposed to solve for subcritical aerodynamics of a two dimensional steady and unsteady aerofoil. The source singularities are placed on the aerofoil surface. The doublet singularity is distributed by a function along the chordline of the aerofoil; this distribution is further projected downstream into infinity.The aerodynamics of an oscillating aerofoil is investigated. The governing unsteady linearized potential equation has a Hankel function as its fundamental solution, which is a source type function. A combination of source and doublet singularity is therefore used for solving the unsteady compressible problem by means of the panel method, this methodology being an extension of a steady aerofoil formulation. Incremental effects of profile change in aerofoil and wake geometry are accounted for. A surface boundary condition is applied on the stationary mean aerofoil surface with time dependent geometrical changes accounted for. An unsteady Kutta condition of equal pressure across the trailing edge is assumed. Results are presented on the aerodynamic influence of Mach number, oscillating frequency parameter, angle of incidence and change of pivoting point. Results are also compared with linear theory, a subsonic experimental result and a subcritical solution of a transonic model.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 647-663 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: A new algorithm family taking into account the entire loading process in a single large time increment is proposed to compute structures with physical non-linearities and is tested on some examples in elastoplasticity. The method considerably reduces the number of transfers between local and global levels, hence the numerical cost of calculation is also diminished.
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  • 86
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    Notes: This report presents a finite element solution for the vibration interaction between an inviscid fluid and a solid. The equation of motion governing the inviscid fluid is expressed in terms of the displacements. This ensures that compatibility and equilibrium will be satisfied automatically along the interface of the coupled systems. To suppress circulation modes with non-zero energy, reduced integration is used when computing the element stiffness matrix contributed by the fluid. In addition, a projection is used on the element mass matrix in order to remove the spurious modes which result from the use of reduced integration. Numerical examples for both fluid and coupled fluid-solid systems are performed and the results are shown.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 755-774 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The present paper deals with the application of the finite element method to dynamic contact buckling problems. The penalty function method is applied to incorporate the contact conditions in the equation of motion and a trial-and-error method is employed to obtain the converged contact state. Numerical examples are analysed to show the effectiveness and the validity of the method, and it is applied to a dynamic buckling problem involving contact phenomena.
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  • 88
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 811-831 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: The dynamic interaction between a compliant material and an impulsive pressure field, periodic in space and instantaneous in time, was examined as a first step at modelling the interaction between organized structures in a turbulent boundary layer and a compliant surface. The interaction, modelled two-dimensionally, was treated dynamically by matching the pressure forces to the surface stresses in the compliant material at each instant of time. A new boundary element method was formulated to model the compliant material which was treated as a linear isotropic material, elastic in dilatation and viscoelastic (Standard) in shear. The inertial forces and viscoelastic creep stresses have been included in this formulation as transient body forces. The elastic interaction was characterized by a non-dimensional threshold velocity, above which the elastic instabilities grew temporally and spatially in the downstream direction to produce a non-linear breakdown of the interaction. Freestream velocities as high as 9CT (shear wave speed) were found to produce stable elastic interactions. Thinner materials produced smaller amplitude waves of higher frequencies that grew more rapidly than those in thicker materials. The stability characteristics were independent of the location of the compliant material with respect to the spatial distribution of the pressure pulse. For viscoelastic interactions, the stability curve, which serves as a bound on the types of materials capable of producing drag reduction, shows distinct regions of elastic types of interactions (Class B) and damping dominated interactions (Class A) as a function of the constants of the rheological model describing the compliant material. Class A disturbances in these interactions show slower growth or decay than Class B disturbances.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 909-912 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 953-968 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The coupled thermoviscoelastic response of a solid-fluid system is computed by a finite element formulation which involves only temperature and displacement fields. The Laplace transform with respect to time is applied to the coupled equations. This results in a global matrix in the transform domain that is symmetric and banded and the time response is obtained by numerical inversion of the transformed solution. Also, this formulation permits the use of fractional derivatives to model viscoelastic material behaviour.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 935-951 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: This paper presents the development of an efficient and numerically stable algorithm for accurately computing the eigensolutions of the quadratic real symmetric eigenproblem arising in the finite dynamic element (FDE) formulation. Closely related to the subspace forward iteration method, the proposed scheme is well suited to extracting the lowest natural frequencies and associated mode shapes of large practical eigenproblems, takes full advantage of the banded configuration of the stiffness, inertia and dynamic correction matrices involved in the eigenproblem and ensures a monotonic convergence from above to the required eigenpairs. A shifting technique for convergence acceleration and an eigenpair verification scheme are also presented. Numerical examples are shown demonstrating the excellent performance of the solution procedure.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1021-1031 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: An integral solution method based on the concept of the direct boundary element technique has been applied to develop a solution procedure for problems of diffusion with a non-linear reaction in one dimension. The non-linearity is handled by a process of quasi-linearization over subintervals or elements in the main domain of integration. The weighting functions are defined for each subinterval such that the discretization is exact for the corresponding linear problem. This leads to a new powerful and simple method for the solution of this class of problems. A banded global matrix is obtained with both the concentration and its gradient as the unknown variables, and the problem is solved in an iterative manner. Illustrative results are presented for a test problem of diffusion with a second order reaction in an infinite slab, an infinite cylinder and spherical geometries. The accuracy of the method for situations with a sharp concentration gradient is demonstrated. The technique can also be used to numerically compute the solution in the boundary layer for fast reactions.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1079-1094 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: An approach, which is based on the double porosity concept and takes into account pore deformation, has been presented to derive a set of coupled differential equations governing the behaviour of fissured porous media. This approach has resulted in a set of non-linear (variable coefficient) differential equations. Various coefficients involved in the formulation have been explicitly defined in terms of measurable physical parameters. The finite element technique has been employed as the numerical tool for the solution of these equations. The results based on the proposed non-linear formulation have been compared with those of previously presented linear (constant coefficient) formulations. It is found that, in relatively rigid formations, the linearity assumption is quite reasonable and can successfully model the behaviour of fissured porous media. However, in very deformable formations, the linearity assumption could lead to a significant level of error in the numerical solutions.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1109-1130 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: This paper discusses various procedures for the implementation of viscoplastic constitutive equations in Finite Element Codes. The set of constitutive equations that has been used is described. Several kinds of implementation, using various numerical techniques, are proposed. Validations of these implementations and comparisons between them are investigated by means of a set of simple but comprehensive examples.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1159-1175 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The treatment of ageing processes in polymers by the finite element (FE) method is described. The development of this analytical method is motivated by the need to assess the effects of ageing on the structural performance of polymers and polymeric composites, particularly when the structures are large and expensive to replace. Also, there is a need to assess the effectiveness of corrective action options when ageing problems do occur, which can be treated by this method. The method describes the treatment of multiple, reactive chemical species in multi-layered polymeric materials by the finite element method. Example problems featuring the simultaneous diffusion and chemical reaction are illustrated: a simple problem of binary diffusion and reaction with comparison of numerical to exact results, and the staged ageing/structural analysis of a solid rocket motor.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1281-1298 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: An effective and efficient error estimation scheme for finite element plate and shell analysis is presented. The error estimate method proposed is applicable to all the plate and shell elements developed using either classical plate and shell or continuum mechanics theories. The global error in energy norm is computed by summing all the elemental errors. The method is well suited for adaptive mesh refinement as the error contribution for each element is known. Demonstration examples using uniform and adaptive refinement schemes for both the plate and shell analysis show the effectiveness of the method proposed.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1299-1321 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
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    Notes: A triangular mesh generator is presented which makes extensive use of side swapping and mesh smoothing to create a grid with few obtuse triangles. To perform the above task a data structure is presented which holds full adjacency information both for nodes and elements. It is shown how this data structure is employed in the process mesh generation, and how the methods of computational geometry such as region decomposition are used not only to decompose a complex region, but also to reflect the boundary grading into the interior the region. Algorithms are provided to show the mechanism of these processes and practical examples are given to support the approach.
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    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1343-1358 
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    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: The method of characteristics is combined with the method of least-squares to solve the advection equation within the finite element framework. Fourier mode analysis shows that the numerical scheme is stable and accurate even when a linear basis function is used. However, in practical application, the involvement of using numerical quadrature in this method can produce numerical instability, depending on the value of the Courant number used. It is found that using C1 continuous Hermitian cubic basis functions in the scheme reduces the degree of instability significantly and produces high accuracy. When being used in a split-operator approach, this method combines naturally with the standard finite element method and results in a highly accurate scheme for advection-dispersion simulation.
    Additional Material: 7 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 99
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1441-1454 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: Conventional approaches for computational structural dynamics (CSD) relevant to time-integration methods involve first employing the classical Galerkin formulations for the spatial discretization to yield a set of ordinary differential equations in time and then employing finite difference approximations for deriving the appropriate step-by-step algorithms. And, almost all of the widely advocated (existing) step-by-step schemes for structural dynamics require an initial acceleration vector to be specified (evaluated) in addition to displacement and velocity vectors for starting the schemes. Unlike the above, in this paper we introduce new representations and architecture towards providing not only direct self-starting features with the elimination of acceleration computations but also for enhancing the computational architecture itself via several other inherent distinguishing characteristics. Thereby, a robust and effective methodology of computation is presented which is an extension of our previous efforts (see Tamma and Namburu3). In particular, to illustrate the basic concepts, in this paper we focus attention on the development of explicit time-integration formulations. The methodology involves expressing the governing dynamic equations of motion in conservation form, and firstly temporal discretization is accomplished in the spirit of Lax-Wendroff-type formulations. Therein, discretization in space is accomplished by introducing stress-based representations and employing the classical Galerkin scheme, and, quite naturally, we advocate employing finite elements as the principal computational tool because of its several inherent advantages. The stability and accuracy of the proposed formulations and the several added distinguishing features are briefly highlighted. Considerations on the effects of damping are additionally included and the introduction of general boundary conditions in a natural setting permits an effective generalized architecture for general applications. Numerical test models are presented to validate the overall developments for computational structural dynamics.
    Additional Material: 9 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 100
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Chichester [u.a.] : Wiley-Blackwell
    International Journal for Numerical Methods in Engineering 29 (1990), S. 1501-1526 
    ISSN: 0029-5981
    Keywords: Engineering ; Engineering General
    Source: Wiley InterScience Backfile Collection 1832-2000
    Topics: Mathematics , Technology
    Notes: This paper discusses the generation of unstructured triangular meshes by the advancing front technique. We also employ the technique to discretize surfaces. A simple and effective algorithm for the specification of element sizes is described. A similar idea is then applied to adaptive remeshing where a completely new mesh is created on the basis of the isolines of a certain important variable. The isolines are obtained from the FE-calculation based on the previous mesh. In this paper, attention is focused on the Poisson's equation. The optimal a priori error estimate for the problem is used to estimate the number of isolines needed for the remeshing. When the estimated error exceeds the tolerance in only a small part of the domain, the adaptive procedure is switched automatically to an adaptive refinement.
    Additional Material: 39 Ill.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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