Intensity characteristics of the noctuid acoustic receptor

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Abstract

Spiking activity of the more sensitive acoustic receptor is described as a function of stimulus intensity. The form of the intensity characteristic depends strongly on stimulus duration. For very brief stimuli, the integral of stimulus power over stimulus duration determines the effectiveness. No response saturation is observed. With longer stimuli (50 msec), a steady firing rate is elicited. The response extends from the spontaneous rate of 20-40 spikes/sec to a saturated firing rate of nearly 700 spikes/sec. The characteristic is monotonic over more than 50 db in stimulus intensity. With very long stimuli (10 sec), the characteristics are nonmonotonic. Firing rates late in the stimulus decrease in response to an increase in stimulus intensity. The nonmonotonic characteristics are attributed to intensity-related changes in response adaptation. © 1971, Rockefeller University Press., All rights reserved.

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Adams, W. B. (1971). Intensity characteristics of the noctuid acoustic receptor. Journal of General Physiology, 58(5), 562–579. https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.58.5.562

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