The electric sense of weakly electric fish. 1984

W Heiligenberg, and J Bastian

Recent studies of electroreception have been particularly successful in three different areas: Electroreceptors are tuned to the dominant frequency of the animal's EOD, and their tuning follows natural and experimentally induced shifts in EOD frequency. Steroid hormones influence the electric organ pacemaker frequency in the genus Sternopygus, and the tuning of electroreceptors will follow hormone-induced frequency shifts only if the receptors experience the animal's EOD. The frequency tuning of electroreceptors reveals properties similar to those of cochlear hair cells, and electroreceptors may be suitable model systems for in vitro studies of cellular and molecular aspects of electrical filter mechanisms in hair cells. In contrast to the South American or gymnotoid electric fish, the African or mormyrid electric fish evaluate electroreceptive information with the help of corollary discharges of their electric-organ pacemaker. The corollary discharge inhibits input from knollenorgan receptors so that, in the context of social communication, the animal only perceives EODs of neighbors but not its own. The corollary discharge at the same time enhances input from most mormyromasts so that the animal, in the context of electrolocation, selectively receives feedback from its own EODs. Finally, responses of ampullary electroreceptors to the animal's own EODs are centrally nulled by an elaborate and modifiable efference copy so that the animal is only informed about "nontrivial", low-frequency events in its environment. Laminated and topographically organized structures in the hindbrain and midbrain of gymnotoid fish are being studied with regard to neuroanatomical fine structure and functional organization. Different laminae and cell types in the hindbrain are specialized for the extraction of specific stimulus features, such as modulations of phase or amplitude in a sinusoidal stimulus regime. This information is passed on to the midbrain for the computation of more complex stimulus variables, such as the difference in phase modulations reported from different parts of the body surface. The torus semicircularis of the midbrain is designed for parallel processing of information from different parts of the body surface and for parallel computation of different stimulus variables for the control of behavioral responses. Electrical and visual information converge in the tectum opticum, which harbors a multimodal representation of sensory space.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries
D008297 Male Males
D009435 Synaptic Transmission The communication from a NEURON to a target (neuron, muscle, or secretory cell) across a SYNAPSE. In chemical synaptic transmission, the presynaptic neuron releases a NEUROTRANSMITTER that diffuses across the synaptic cleft and binds to specific synaptic receptors, activating them. The activated receptors modulate specific ion channels and/or second-messenger systems in the postsynaptic cell. In electrical synaptic transmission, electrical signals are communicated as an ionic current flow across ELECTRICAL SYNAPSES. Neural Transmission,Neurotransmission,Transmission, Neural,Transmission, Synaptic
D002490 Central Nervous System The main information-processing organs of the nervous system, consisting of the brain, spinal cord, and meninges. Cerebrospinal Axis,Axi, Cerebrospinal,Axis, Cerebrospinal,Central Nervous Systems,Cerebrospinal Axi,Nervous System, Central,Nervous Systems, Central,Systems, Central Nervous
D004557 Electric Organ In about 250 species of electric fishes, modified muscle fibers forming disklike multinucleate plates arranged in stacks like batteries in series and embedded in a gelatinous matrix. A large torpedo ray may have half a million plates. Muscles in different parts of the body may be modified, i.e., the trunk and tail in the electric eel, the hyobranchial apparatus in the electric ray, and extrinsic eye muscles in the stargazers. Powerful electric organs emit pulses in brief bursts several times a second. They serve to stun prey and ward off predators. A large torpedo ray can produce of shock of more than 200 volts, capable of stunning a human. (Storer et al., General Zoology, 6th ed, p672) Electric Organs,Organ, Electric,Organs, Electric
D004594 Electrophysiology The study of the generation and behavior of electrical charges in living organisms particularly the nervous system and the effects of electricity on living organisms.
D005260 Female Females
D005399 Fishes A group of cold-blooded, aquatic vertebrates having gills, fins, a cartilaginous or bony endoskeleton, and elongated bodies covered with scales.
D006198 Hair Cells, Auditory Sensory cells in the organ of Corti, characterized by their apical stereocilia (hair-like projections). The inner and outer hair cells, as defined by their proximity to the core of spongy bone (the modiolus), change morphologically along the COCHLEA. Towards the cochlear apex, the length of hair cell bodies and their apical STEREOCILIA increase, allowing differential responses to various frequencies of sound. Auditory Hair Cells,Cochlear Hair Cells,Auditory Hair Cell,Cell, Cochlear Hair,Cells, Cochlear Hair,Cochlear Hair Cell,Hair Cell, Auditory,Hair Cell, Cochlear,Hair Cells, Cochlear
D000344 Afferent Pathways Nerve structures through which impulses are conducted from a peripheral part toward a nerve center. Afferent Pathway,Pathway, Afferent,Pathways, Afferent
D000818 Animals Unicellular or multicellular, heterotrophic organisms, that have sensation and the power of voluntary movement. Under the older five kingdom paradigm, Animalia was one of the kingdoms. Under the modern three domain model, Animalia represents one of the many groups in the domain EUKARYOTA. Animal,Metazoa,Animalia

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