A time-comparison circuit in the electric fish midbrain. I. Behavior and physiology

Behavioral experiments show that the weakly electric fish, Eigenmannia, detects differences in timing as small as 400 nsec between electric signals from different parts of its body surface. The neural basis of this remarkable temporal resolution was investigated by recording from elements of the phase-coding system, a chain of electrotonically connected neurons devoted to the processing of temporal information. Each element of this system fires a single action potential for every cycle of the electric signal (either the fish's own electric organ discharge or a sinusoidal signal of similar frequency). For phase- coding primary afferents and midbrain neurons, the temporal resolution was determined by measuring each unit's capacity to lock its spike to a particular phase of the stimulus cycle. The jitter of a neuron's response (measured as the standard deviation of the timing of the spikes with respect to the stimulus) decreases from the level of the primary afferent (mean = 30 microsec) to the midbrain torus (mean = 11 microsec); these results can be correlated with morphological measures of convergence. The temporal resolution of single neurons is still inferior to that displayed at the behavioral level.

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