Publication | Open Access
Sustained Responses to Brief Stimuli: Swimming in <i>Xenopus</i> Embryos
60
Citations
33
References
1984
Year
Motor ControlAbstract ProlongedSensory SystemsEmbryologyNeural MechanismNeurodynamicsPositive Feedback ExcitationMotor NeuroscienceMotor BehaviorHealth SciencesSensorimotor ControlMorphogenesisNeuroecologyNervous SystemFeedback ExcitationDevelopmental BiologyNeurophysiologyComputational NeuroscienceSensorimotor TransformationPhysiologyMotor SystemNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemBrief StimuliMedicineAnimal Behavior
ABSTRACT Prolonged responses to brief triggering or releasing stimuli are commonplace in animal behaviour. The initiation of locomotion is an example but hypotheses for the central nervous origin of locomotory rhythms generally do not explain how activity is sustained. After a brief review, which suggests that positive feedback excitation could be involved, evidence fromXenopus embryos is considered. Here a brief skin stimulus can evoke long episodes of swimming even in curarized embryos. Feedback excitation provides a possible explanation for sustaining fictive swimming. This hypothesis is evaluated by simulation of simple neuronal networks using a physiologically realistic digital computer modelling programme. The results from simulations suggest that: (1) positive feedback excitation could sustain activity either in central pattern generators for locomotion or in postural motor systems and (2) that the model networks tested here are not appropriate to produce the pattern of motor output from the Xenopus embryo spinal cord.
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