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Journal ArticleDOI

An evaluation of length and force feedback to soleus muscles of decerebrate cats.

J C Houk, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1970 - 
- Vol. 33, Iss: 6, pp 784-811
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TLDR
This work has attempted to determine whether or not this regulation of force by signals from tendon organs is significant in decerebrate cats.
Abstract
IT IS NOW WELL KNOWN that contraction of a muscle is reflexly excited by responses of its spindle receptors to stretch (32, 34) and is reflexly inhibited by responses of its Golgi tendon organs to contraction (10, 31). Many experimental techniques have been used to confirm these observations (7, 12, 23). Nevertheless, the actual importance of each of these reflexes in the gradation of contraction remains obscure because of the lack of an experimental approach which is capable of estimating quantitatively their respective influences (39). Formerly it was believed by many that tendon organs responded and inhibited contraction on1 .y when muscular forces became excessive. Recent studies (19, 26) have cast doubt on this hypothesis by demonstrating for these receptors a much lower threshold to must ular contract ion than was previ not ouslv t .h assure ought. This find .ing alone does a con tinuo us regulation of muscular force by signals from tendon organs since impulses must be transmitted through one or two interneurons before they may inhibit homonymous motoneurons (7, 31). Studies have shown that these Ib pathways transmit impulses more effectively in spinal than in decerebrate cats (8). It is therefore likely that the gain of this reflex pathway is not constant but, rather, is subject to control by signals from various regions of the nervous system. For example, Ib pathways are facilitated by signals transmitted from the red nucleus (IS). As a result, the relative importance of tendon organs in the regulation of contraction would depend on the particular state of the experimental animal. We have attempted to determine whether or not this regulation of force is significant in decerebrate cats.

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Citations
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Planning of movement parameters in a visuo-motor tracking task.

TL;DR: It is proposed that the monkeys trained to track a continuously moving visual target with a joystick use a standard time constant for the purpose of calculating how far the target will move during each of their positional corrections.
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Push–Pull Control of Motor Output

TL;DR: This work studied push–pull in the motor output stage of the feline spinal cord, a system that allows independent control of inhibitory and excitatory components, and showed that the stronger the background of inhibition, the greater the peak force production.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neural and mechanical contributions to the stretch reflex: a model synthesis.

TL;DR: A model for the soleus stretch reflex in the decerebrate cat was synthesized from models of the neural and muscular components, including the two proprioceptors and their associated afferents, and the α motoneuron pool with its reflex pathways.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Functional significance of cell size in spinal motoneurons

TL;DR: The present paper is concerned with the central part of the motoneuron and the significance of its size in synaptic transmission and asks whether the cell bodies (and dendrites) connected with large and small motor fibers have different functional properties which can be recognized by their discharge characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Excitability and inhibitibility of motoneurons of different sizes

TL;DR: It was concluded tentatively that the size or surface area of a motoneuron determines its excitability and hence its responsiveness to stretch-evoked impulses and if this conclusion is correct, it may infer that size is a prime determinant of excitability throughout the nervous system.
Journal ArticleDOI

The mechanical properties of cat soleus muscle during controlled lengthening and shortening movements

TL;DR: By supplying pulses to different subdivisions of the ventral nerve roots in rotation, it was possible to obtain smooth contractions of cat soleus with low rates of stimulation.
Journal ArticleDOI

An analysis of the mechanical components in frog's striated muscle.

TL;DR: J. R. Wilkie striated muscle An analysis of the mechanical components in frog's This information is current as of March 19, 2008 and has been published is the official journal of The Journal of Physiology Online.
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