Teyke T, Weiss K R, Kupfermann I
Center for Neurobiology and Behavior, College of Physicians and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York, New York 10032.
J Neurosci. 1990 Dec;10(12):3922-34. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.10-12-03922.1990.
The appetitive phase of feeding behavior in Aplysia consists of a behavioral sequence in which the quiescent animal starts to locomote and then assumes a characteristic feeding posture. In this position, head-turning responses can be elicited by a localized food stimulus (seaweed) delivered to the lips or tentacles. In response to brief (open loop) stimulation with seaweed, the animal turns toward the stimulus but greatly overshoots the target. However, the angular velocity and the final turning angle are a function of the eccentricity of the stimulus, progressively increasing with greater eccentricities. In a food-aroused animal, a brief tactile stimulus evokes turning and biting responses similar to those triggered by seaweed, which provides both tactile and chemical stimulation. Upon repeated tactile stimulation, however, the response magnitude decrements rapidly, whereas the magnitude remains high when turning responses are repeatedly elicited by food stimuli. A purely chemical stimulus sometimes can elicit a turning response, but chemical stimuli alone are much less efficacious than tactile stimuli alone. When the stimulus is maintained in a stationary position (closed loop), the animal turns until its mouth is oriented over the food. A turning response to a lateral stimulus can be reduced by an immediately following medial stimulus. To explain the above findings, we propose a form of response substitution, in which the response to the first, lateral stimulus is substituted by a weaker response to a more medial stimulus. No turning response is evoked when the animal is stimulated while performing spontaneous or evoked bites, though biting per se does not interrupt ongoing turning movements. In animals with lesions of the cerebral-buccal connectives, a food stimulus on the mouth is also followed by a reduction of the capacity of stimuli to elicit turning responses. In these lesioned animals, the food stimulus appears to elicit a bite command, though the biting behavior itself does not occur. Thus, it appears that the bite-related gating of stimuli is of cerebral origin, rather than due to the generation of the buccal motor program. The force necessary to power the turning movements was calculated from the trajectories of the movements. The results indicate that a power phase during the first half of the duration of the total movement is sufficient to generate a turn. The power phase can be followed by a brief gliding phase, and finally the movement appears to be actively terminated.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
海兔进食行为的欲望阶段包括一系列行为,即静止的动物开始移动,然后呈现出特定的进食姿势。在这个姿势下,将局部食物刺激(海藻)施加到嘴唇或触须上,能引发转头反应。对海藻的短暂(开环)刺激做出反应时,动物会转向刺激源,但会大幅越过目标。然而,角速度和最终转角是刺激离心率的函数,随着离心率的增加而逐渐增大。在被食物激起进食欲望的动物中,短暂的触觉刺激会引发类似于海藻触发的转头和咬食反应,海藻能提供触觉和化学刺激。然而,在反复进行触觉刺激时,反应幅度会迅速减小,而当食物刺激反复引发转头反应时,反应幅度仍会保持较高水平。单纯的化学刺激有时能引发转头反应,但单独的化学刺激远不如单独的触觉刺激有效。当刺激保持在固定位置(闭环)时,动物会转动直到其嘴对准食物。紧接着的内侧刺激会减弱对侧向刺激的转头反应。为了解释上述发现,我们提出一种反应替代形式,即对第一个侧向刺激的反应被对更内侧刺激的较弱反应所替代。当动物在进行自发或诱发的咬食动作时受到刺激,不会引发转头反应,不过咬食本身并不会中断正在进行的转头动作。在大脑 - 口部神经连接受损的动物中,嘴上的食物刺激也会导致刺激引发转头反应的能力下降。在这些受损动物中,食物刺激似乎会引发咬食指令,尽管咬食行为本身并未发生。因此,似乎与咬食相关的刺激门控源自大脑,而非口部运动程序的产生。通过运动轨迹计算出驱动转头动作所需的力。结果表明,在整个运动持续时间的前半段存在一个动力阶段,足以产生一次转动。动力阶段之后可能会有一个短暂的滑行阶段,最后运动似乎是主动终止的。(摘要截选至400字)