Bullock T H
Electroencephalogr Clin Neurophysiol. 1984 May;57(5):473-83. doi: 10.1016/0013-4694(84)90077-4.
Ongoing electrical activity was recorded from the brain of the virtually intact, semirestrained, unanesthetized octopus by semimicroelectrodes thrust through the cartilage into the optic, vertical or basal lobe. With flexible lead-in wires such electrodes were carried by and moved with the head without causing movement artifacts. Controls suggest that the activity reported comes from the brain; it is reversibly flattened by doses of urethane that do not embarrass respiration. Muscle potentials are only troublesome on occasion. Seen through a wideband filter, neuronal spikes are usually small or below noise level under these conditions; slow waves (1-70 Hz) dominate, with a maximum less than 25 Hz, usually less than 10 Hz and no consistent sharp peaks. The fall in power above ca. 25 Hz is usually slower than in the typical vertebrate EEG but the average power spectrum is much more like those of vertebrate brains than of cerebral ganglia of other invertebrates (insect, crustacean, gastropod). Variance among sample epochs is large, e.g. short spells may have relatively much more low frequency (less than 25 Hz) or more 'hashy' high frequency (greater than 50 Hz) energy; there may be runs of spikes. Fluctuation in the composition of ongoing activity is graphically shown by writing out in parallel the outputs of several narrow band (one octave) filters; this shows irregular low frequency waxing and waning of the amplitude in each band. The envelopes were computed and their peak power is around 1 Hz or lower; the waxing and waning in the several bands is sometimes strongly correlated, especially when the envelope amplitude is large and slow. Optic lobe activity tends usually to be faster, with more small spikey hash than in the vertical lobe. The described electrical activity of the brain is strikingly episodic; it is recorded during seconds or minutes separated by long intervals of nearly electrical silence (10-40 dB lower power; the difference larger at frequencies greater than 20 Hz). Active and quiet periods are usually not correlated with differences in visible behavior. Under my conditions the animal is usually not moving except for quiet ventilation and occasional local writhing of an arm. Potentials evoked by single flashes of light (0.2-1/sec) are conspicuous in the optic but not in the vertical lobe. They form a sequence of large, slow waves; the first peak may be at about 40 msec, others up to at least 400 msec.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
通过半微电极穿过软骨插入章鱼的视叶、垂直叶或基底叶,在几乎完整、半约束、未麻醉的章鱼大脑中记录持续的电活动。这种电极通过柔性引入线与头部相连并随头部移动,不会产生运动伪迹。对照实验表明,所记录的活动来自大脑;剂量的氨基甲酸乙酯可使其活动可逆性减弱,且不会影响呼吸。肌肉电位偶尔会造成干扰。在这些条件下,通过宽带滤波器观察,神经元尖峰通常较小或低于噪声水平;慢波(1 - 70赫兹)占主导,最大值低于25赫兹,通常低于10赫兹,且没有一致的尖锐峰值。高于约25赫兹的功率下降通常比典型的脊椎动物脑电图慢,但平均功率谱更类似于脊椎动物大脑,而不像其他无脊椎动物(昆虫、甲壳类、腹足类)的脑神经节。样本时段之间的方差很大,例如短时间内可能有相对更多的低频(低于25赫兹)或更“杂乱”的高频(高于五十赫兹)能量;可能会有一连串的尖峰。通过并行写出几个窄带(一个倍频程)滤波器的输出,可以直观地显示持续活动组成的波动;这显示了每个频段中幅度不规则的低频增强和减弱。计算了包络线,其峰值功率在1赫兹或更低;几个频段中的增强和减弱有时高度相关,尤其是当包络线幅度大且变化缓慢时。视叶活动通常倾向于更快,比垂直叶有更多小的尖峰状杂乱信号。所描述的大脑电活动明显是间歇性的;在几秒或几分钟内记录到的活动,中间间隔着长时间的几乎电静息状态(功率低10 - 40分贝;在高于20赫兹的频率下差异更大)。活动期和安静期通常与可见行为的差异无关。在我的实验条件下,除了安静的呼吸和偶尔手臂的局部扭动外,动物通常不动。单次闪光(0.2 - 1次/秒)诱发的电位在视叶中很明显,但在垂直叶中不明显。它们形成一系列大的慢波;第一个峰值可能在约40毫秒,其他峰值至少可达400毫秒。(摘要截选至400字)