The crustacean stomatogastric ganglion (STG) receives descending neuromodulatory inputs from three anterior ganglia: the paired commissural ganglia (CoGs), and the single esophageal ganglion (OG). In this paper, we provide the first detailed and quantitative analyses of the short- and long-term effects of removal of these descending inputs (decentralization) on the pyloric rhythm of the STG. Thirty minutes after decentralization, the mean frequency of the pyloric rhythm dropped from 1.20 Hz in control to 0.52 Hz. Whereas the relative phase of pyloric neuron activity was approximately constant across frequency in the controls, after decentralization this changed markedly. Nine control preparations kept for 5–6 d in vitro maintained pyloric r...
Abstract Neuronal network flexibility enables animals to respond appropriately to changes in their i...
The rhythmic motor patterns produced by the pyloric circuit of the shrimp Palaemon are substantially...
Neuromodulators, whether neuronally released within the nervous system or released into the bloodstr...
The crustacean stomatogastric ganglion (STG) receives descending neuromodulatory inputs from three a...
tern generator of the pyloric rhythm (filtration to the midgut) is known to be located in the stomat...
Many nervous systems contain rhythmically active subnet-works that interact despite oscillating at w...
For an appropriate interaction with the environment, animals process sensory information with their ...
Even when isolated from the remainder of the nervous system, central pattern generating circuits (CP...
Rhythmic motor patterns are found throughout all living organisms and are responsible for maintainin...
Neuronal networks produce reliable functional output throughout the lifespan of an animal despite ce...
The nervous system receives and processes sensory information from the environment and can thus resp...
Synaptic feedback from rhythmically active neuronal circuits commonly causes their descending inputs...
Understanding the biological basis of behavior is a core goal of neuroscience research. Two aspects ...
In the red lobster (Palinurus vulgaris), an identified neurone, the anterior pyloric modulator neuro...
ABSTRACT: The motor patterns produced by the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) are strongly influenced b...
Abstract Neuronal network flexibility enables animals to respond appropriately to changes in their i...
The rhythmic motor patterns produced by the pyloric circuit of the shrimp Palaemon are substantially...
Neuromodulators, whether neuronally released within the nervous system or released into the bloodstr...
The crustacean stomatogastric ganglion (STG) receives descending neuromodulatory inputs from three a...
tern generator of the pyloric rhythm (filtration to the midgut) is known to be located in the stomat...
Many nervous systems contain rhythmically active subnet-works that interact despite oscillating at w...
For an appropriate interaction with the environment, animals process sensory information with their ...
Even when isolated from the remainder of the nervous system, central pattern generating circuits (CP...
Rhythmic motor patterns are found throughout all living organisms and are responsible for maintainin...
Neuronal networks produce reliable functional output throughout the lifespan of an animal despite ce...
The nervous system receives and processes sensory information from the environment and can thus resp...
Synaptic feedback from rhythmically active neuronal circuits commonly causes their descending inputs...
Understanding the biological basis of behavior is a core goal of neuroscience research. Two aspects ...
In the red lobster (Palinurus vulgaris), an identified neurone, the anterior pyloric modulator neuro...
ABSTRACT: The motor patterns produced by the stomatogastric ganglion (STG) are strongly influenced b...
Abstract Neuronal network flexibility enables animals to respond appropriately to changes in their i...
The rhythmic motor patterns produced by the pyloric circuit of the shrimp Palaemon are substantially...
Neuromodulators, whether neuronally released within the nervous system or released into the bloodstr...