| Single fibre electromyography Trends in Neurosciences, Volume 2, Issue , 1 January 1979, Pages 185-188 Erik Stålberg Abstract In the past, much of the work carried out on muscular activity has employed the use of concentric needle electromyography. However, in recent years the technique of single fibre electromyography has been developed. As explained by Erik Stålberg, with the use of this greatly refined technique our knowledge of the electrical behaviour of individual muscle fibres, of the motor end-plate, and of the intramuscular nerve tree, has been, and is being, greatly increased. Abstract | PDF (412 kb) |
| Muscle contraction generates discrete sound bursts Biophysical Journal, Volume 41, Issue 1, 1 January 1983, Pages 35-40 F.V. Brozovich and G.H. Pollack Abstract Isolated frog sartorius muscles were stimulated to shorten under lightly loaded conditions. A piezoelectric transducer was placed alongside the muscle to record sounds generated during contraction. Shortening was accompanied by the generation of a series of discrete sound bursts. The bursts were found to be moderately repeatable among successive contractions; 44% repeated from contraction to contraction. The duration of each sound burst was on the order of 400 mus, and the temperature dependence of the interval between successive bursts had a Q10 of approximately 2. Sound intensity was variable: average acoustic power ranged from 0.05–0.4 mW/g, or approximately 1% of the heat generated during contraction. The generation of discrete bursts of sound during contraction, rather than continuous sound, implies that contractile behavior may be discontinuous. Abstract | PDF (721 kb) |
| Nucleus Accumbens Neurons Are Innately Tuned for Rewarding and Aversive Taste Stimuli, Encode Their Predictors, and Are Linked to Motor Output Neuron, Volume 45, Issue 4, 17 February 2005, Pages 587-597 Mitchell F. Roitman, Robert A. Wheeler and Regina M. Carelli Summary The nucleus accumbens (NAc) is a key component of the brain’s reward pathway, yet little is known of how NAc cells respond to primary rewarding or aversive stimuli. Here, naive rats received brief intraoral infusions of sucrose and quinine paired with cues in a classical conditioning paradigm while the electrophysiological activity of individual NAc neurons was recorded. NAc neurons (102) were typically inhibited by sucrose (39 of 52, 75%) or excited by quinine (30 of 40, 75%) infusions. Changes in firing rate were correlated with the oromotor response to intraoral infusions. Most taste-responsive neurons responded to only one of the stimuli. NAc neurons developed responses to the cues paired with sucrose and quinine. Thus, NAc neurons are innately tuned to rewarding and aversive stimuli and rapidly develop responses to predictive cues. The results indicate that the output of the NAc is very different when rats taste rewarding versus aversive stimuli. Summary | Full Text | PDF (302 kb) |
Copyright © 1980 The Biophysical Society. All rights reserved.
Biophysical Journal, Volume 30, Issue 1, 119-127, 1 April 1980
doi:10.1016/S0006-3495(80)85080-6
Research Article
G. Oster and J.S. Jaffe
Low frequency audible vibrations are produced by human skeletal muscles undergoing sustained contraction. The effect is easily demonstrable with an electronic stethoscope which amplifies sound below 50 Hz. Autocorrelation analysis of the signal shows that it is periodic with a frequency 25 +/- 2.5 Hz. The quality of the sound is the same for all the skeletal muscles tested and is unaffected by changes in tension, ambient temperature, and blood flow. Electrically-stimulated contraction produces a sound which is indistinguishable from voluntary contraction. The amplitude of the sound increases linearly with tension. The sound signals are uncorrelated both in frequency and phase with electromyographic signals obtained simultaneously while the muscle is contacted. Arguments are presented to show that the sounds may be an intrinsic property of muscle contraction.