Publication | Closed Access
Slow Contraction and Its Relation to Spontaneous Activity in the Sea-Anemone<i>Metridium Senile</i>(L.)
67
Citations
12
References
1954
Year
Muscle FunctionSpontaneous ActivityOceanographyPeripheral NerveAnatomyImpulse DecaysSlow ContractionPeripheral Nervous SystemFacilitated ContractionBiophysicsHealth SciencesNeuroecologyNervous SystemNeuromuscular PhysiologyRapid Reflex ContractionsBiologyNeurophysiologyNeuroanatomyPhysiologyElectrophysiologyCentral Nervous SystemMarine BiologyMedicine
ABSTRACT It has been known for some time that the most rapid reflex contractions of sea-anemones show a characteristic relation to the stimulus. Thus in Calliactis parasitica a short series of adequate electric shocks, given at a frequency of about 1 per sec., is regularly followed by a facilitated contraction of the marginal sphincter (Pantin, 1935a, b). That is, each successive shock sets up a nervous impulse which facilitates the response of the muscle to the next; so that the contraction increases by steps corresponding to the shocks. The facilitating effect of each impulse decays so that as the frequency of stimulation is lowered the response becomes smaller and finally vanishes.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1