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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

SINGLE UNIT AND ENSEMBLE RESPONSE PROPERTIES OF THE GUSTATORY CORTEX IN THE AWAKE RAT

Stapleton, Jennifer Rebecca 10 August 2007 (has links)
Most studies of gustatory coding have been performed in either anesthetized or awake, passively stimulated rats. In this dissertation the influences of behavioral state on gustatory processing in awake rats are described. In the first set of experiments, the effects of non-contingent tastant delivery on the chemical tuning of single neurons were explored. Tastants were delivered non-contingently through intra-oral cannulas to restrained, non water-deprived rats while single unit responses were recorded from the gustatory cortex (GC). As the subjects' behavior progressed from acceptance to rejection of the tastants, the chemical tuning of the neurons changed as well. This suggests that the subjects' behavioral state powerfully influences gustatory processing. In the second set of experiments, rats were trained to lick for fluid reinforcement on an FR5 schedule while single unit activity was recorded from GC. In this case, the chemical tuning was much more stable. Under this paradigm, chemosensory responses were rapid (~ 150 ms) and broadly tuned. In the third study, it was found that ensembles of GC neurons could discriminate between tastants and their concentrations on a single trial basis, and such discrimination was accomplished with a combination of rate and temporal coding. Ensembles of GC neurons also anticipated the identity of the upcoming stimulus when the tastant delivery was predictable. Finally, it was found that ensembles of GC neurons could discriminate between the bitter stimuli nicotine and quinine. Nicotine is both a bitter tastant and a trigeminal stimulant, and when the acetylcholine receptors in the lingual epithelium were blocked with mecamylamine, the ensembles failed to discriminate nicotine from quinine.

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