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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2022 Apr 27.
Published in final edited form as: Science. 1977 May 6;196(4290):678–680. doi: 10.1126/science.193185

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Relationship of PRF unit discharge to motor activity. (A) Polygraphic display of unit firing in unrestrained cat. Unit discharge is accompanied by phasic EMG activity. (Inset) High speed oscilloscopic tracing from same record (arrow) demonstrating the absence of artifact in the microwire recording. This unit had an average signal-to-noise ratio. (B) Unit responses to strong shock stimuli were brief, most discharge being time-locked to movements (augmented EMG) occurring during stimulation rather than to the shock stimulus itself. Dots indicate time of delivery of 1-msec shock stimulus to receptive field. (Inset) Brief response time-locked to shock in microwire recording of same unit. (C) Two units with different spontaneous activity levels simultaneously recorded during head restraint. Augmented unit discharge was correlated with muscle contraction. (D) During grooming, unit dischaiged rhythmically, with bursts time-locked to movements. Head motion created the slow rhythmic artifact in this broad-spectrum EMG recording. Grooming had been in progress for 20 minutes and continued for an additional 5 minutes. Abbreviations: EMG, electromyogram of dorsal neck muscles; Unit, the pulse output of a window discriminator. (A) and (D) are from the same cell. The 10-seconds marker applies to all four panels, exclusive of the two insets.